The Centre for Climate Finance & Investment research in nature highlights the importance of investments in areas such as resilience-building nature-based solutions, investment opportunities, biodiversity projects and conservation and climate regulation. By investing in nature-based solutions governments, businesses, and communities can unlock multiple co-benefits while addressing the interconnected challenges of climate change, biodiversity loss, and sustainable development.
The Carbon Credit Price and National Tree Planting Impact of Woodland Carbon Code Admittance to the UK-ETS
A new policy paper from King's College London, Imperial College Business School & Foresight Sustainable Forestry Company suggests that admitting the Woodland Carbon Code (WCC) into the UK Emissions Trading Scheme (UK-ETS) could unlock significant economic and environmental benefits.
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Corporate action on biodiversity: an exploration of drivers
Biodiversity investing is yet to be a prominent feature across the corporate universe, according to a report authored, through Imperial Consultants.
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Nature Investment as a Response to the Climate Crisis: Opportunities in Southeast Asia
A new report from the CCFI aims to offer investors a menu of nature investment options, from ‘armchair investing’ in fixed-income markets, to money directed at real assets where investors are tied in over time.
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Voluntary Carbon Markets in ASEAN: Challenges and Opportunities for Scaling Up
UK’s COP26 Universities Network and leading research centres in Singapore partner on policy reports highlighting climate change in the ASEAN region.
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Forestry-Backed Assets Design
New research from the Singapore Green Finance Centre finds that bundling forest investments across forest ages, geographies, and ecosystems can reduce investment risk by half or more.
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Future of Food Part 3 – Can Markets Save Nature? Investing in Nature to Tackle Biodiversity Loss and Enhance Food Security
The third in a series of reports exploring the risks and opportunities facing the global agricultural sector from climate change, produced in partnership with Standard Chartered.
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Complex but Crucial: The Private Sector and Jurisdictional REDD+ (Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation)
Research paper co-authored by CCFI Research Fellow Pernille Holtedahl on options for private sector involvement under Jurisdictional REDD+.
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Future of Food Part 2: Nature-based solutions and the quest for low-carbon and climate-resilient agriculture
Research report exploring the potential for nature-based solutions to tackle the interlinkages between agriculture, land use, and climate change.
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Climate Change and the Future of Food
An investigation into financial risks to the agriculture sector due to climate change in India and emerging markets. The second in the ongoing partnership with Standard Chartered.
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