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You are here: Home / cat / New WWF Investment Approach Could Mobilize Billions in Funding for Nature Protection

New WWF Investment Approach Could Mobilize Billions in Funding for Nature Protection

Dated: November 14, 2025

WWF and its partners have introduced a new investment model, the Landscape Finance Approach (LFA), at COP30, designed to transform nature conservation into a low-risk, high-yield investment opportunity. This model comes at a critical moment, as the global biodiversity funding gap nears a trillion dollars annually, and world leaders have less than five years to meet commitments to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030. WWF is urging financial institutions and corporations to collaborate on implementing the LFA, aiming to mobilize at least $20 billion for both people and nature by 2030.

The LFA addresses long-standing misconceptions that financing nature is too small, risky, or niche. Traditional conservation investments have been fragmented, costly, and hindered by poor governance, tenure insecurity, policy misalignment, and harmful subsidies. These challenges contribute to an annual $900 billion shortfall in funding to restore and protect nature, while $7 trillion continues to flow into activities that harm ecosystems. By aggregating individual projects into landscape-level portfolios, the LFA creates investable, revenue-generating conservation assets that reduce risk, maximize returns, and enable systemic transformation.

Through the LFA, different classes of investors can play complementary roles. Philanthropies fund pipelines and absorb initial risks, institutional investors and banks scale successful models through blended finance, corporates secure resilient supply chains, and governments provide enabling policies and fiscal incentives. Blended finance structures combine grants, concessional debt, commercial capital, and equity, aligning risk-return expectations and supporting large-scale, sustainable investments. Standardized monitoring and verification systems enhance transparency, reduce transaction risk, and improve efficiency through economies of scale.

The model has already shown results in Brazil’s Cerrado, a biodiversity hotspot threatened by deforestation for soy production. There, concessional and blended loans redirected soy cultivation to degraded lands, while grants and microfinance supported local community cooperatives in sustainable resource management. Existing initiatives, such as Project Finance for Permanence, were leveraged to create comprehensive agreements securing long-term conservation funding. Early adopters in the Cerrado not only mitigated ecological collapse but also established more resilient, future-proofed investment portfolios.

WWF emphasizes that the LFA is a tested, scalable solution capable of accelerating progress toward the 2030 biodiversity targets. By turning nature into a bankable asset, the approach provides investors with secure, diversified portfolios, mitigates systemic risks, and enables transformative change across landscapes and ecosystems. The initiative represents a strategic pathway to mobilize billions in funding for nature while generating tangible environmental, social, and financial benefits.

Related Posts

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  • How Four Core Elements Are Shaping Adaptation Finance for a Changing Climate
  • ADF Approves $9 Million to Boost Climate Resilience and Flood Adaptation in Western Rwanda
  • Governor Glenn Youngkin Announces $15.5 Million for Virginia Land Conservation Projects

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