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For every $1 spent protecting nature, $30 goes to destroying it

by NNW Bureau
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The UN on Thursday issued a call for widespread financial reform as the most powerful way to shift global markets towards realising a better world, for people and the planet.

For every dollar invested in protecting nature, 30 dollars are spent on destroying it – that’s the central finding of theĀ State of Finance for Nature 2026Ā report, which calls for a major policy shift towards scaling up solutions that help the natural world – and support the economy at the same time.

Damage control

The data identifies several areas where the damage is particularly stark: utilities, industrials, energy and basic materials; and sectors which benefit from environmentally harmful subsidies – namely fossil fuels, agriculture, water, transport and construction.

ā€œIf you follow the money, you see the size of challenge ahead of us,ā€ said Inger Andersen, Executive Director ofĀ UNEP, in response to the report, contrasting the slow progress of nature-based solutions with harmful investments and subsidies which, she declared, are surging ahead.Ā 

ā€œWe can either invest in nature’s destruction or power its recovery – there is no middle ground.ā€

A wealth of solutions

As well as identifying the size of the imbalance, the report’s authors lay out a vision of a ā€œbig nature turnaround,ā€ highlighting examples of solutions that both work, and are economically viable.Ā 

They include:

  • greening urban areas to counter heat-island effects and improve liveability for citizens;Ā 
  • embedding nature in road and energy infrastructure;Ā 
  • Producing emissions-negative building materials.

The study also charts a path for phasing out harmful subsidies and destructive investment in systems of production and scaling up investments that are ā€œnature-positive.ā€

The numbers in brief

  • In 2023, $7.3 trillion flowed into nature-negative activities.
  • In the same year, only $220 billion supported nature-based solutions, and the vast majority came from public spending)
  • However, the trend is positive: spending on biodiversity and landscape protection rose by 11 per cent between 2022 and 2023, and international public finance for nature-based solutions in 2023 was 22 per cent higher than in 2022, and 55 per cent above 2015 levels.

READ MORE: https://news.un.org/en/story/2026/01/1166809

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