How Investors Can Integrate Biodiversity into Their Financial Strategies
How Investors Can Integrate Biodiversity
Biodiversity plays a vital role in supporting life on Earth, which helps contribute over half of global GDP, and yet key species and ecosystems continue to be lost.
The above infographic, sponsored by STOXX, shows how investors can integrate biodiversity into their investment strategies.
What is Biodiversity?
In short, biodiversity refers to the rich diversity of species, ecosystems, and genetic material that exists on Earth. Without it, the natural processes and systems that we depend on to provide us with the food we eat and even the air we breathe could break down.
Nevertheless, according to the WWF Living Planet Index, which tracks 31,821 populations of 5,320 species across terrestrial, marine, and freshwater ecosystems, there was an average 69% decline in monitored wildlife between 1970 and 2018.
In Latin America and the Caribbean alone, which contains the Amazon rainforest (often called the lungs of the planet because of its role in producing the oxygen we breathe), there was a 94% drop in average population, the largest regional decline observed. In terms of ecosystems, freshwater species saw the greatest decline, 84%.
What is Driving the Loss of Biodiversity?
The current rate of biodiversity loss has been called the Sixth Extinction, equivalent to the end of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, making this decade a make-it-or-break-it moment for the planet.
Here are three key factors driving the loss:
1. Land Use
According to projections from the United Nations, the global population could reach 10 billion some time in the 2050s. And all those new people will need places to live, to work, and importantly more food to eat and this means more land for new cities and new farms.
If the last 20 years are any indication, this could be bad news for global forests. According to Global Forest Watch, over 459 million hectares of forests were lost between 2001 and 2022, due to a combination of agricultural expansion, forestry, and wildfires. This adds up to a 12% decrease from 2000.
2. Pollution
Air pollution, in the form of particulate matter smaller than 2.5 microns (μg), can now be found everywhere on Earth and at levels that are unsafe for both humans and the wider ecosystem.
Kuwait, Egypt, and Afghanistan have the worst average annual PM2.5 concentrations on Earth, over 12 times safe levels, while the Bahamas, Finland, and Iceland are only slightly above the Air Quality Goal of 5 µg/m3 set by the World Health Organization .
3. Climate Change
While the exact figures are still being finalized, it is clear that 2023 was the warmest year on record, by far. And this is a problem, not only for humanity because of rising seas, wilder weather, and disrupted growing seasons, to name but a few reasons, but also for the viability for many species.
Each degree of warming increases the risk of extinction, especially for sensitive ecosystems like coral reefs, which even though they cover only 1% of the ocean’s surface, are nonetheless home to one-quarter of all marine life.
How Can Investors Support Biodiversity?
By any measure, biodiversity on Earth is under severe pressure, which is why in 2022, the parties to the UN Convention on Biodiversity adopted the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, with 23 goals for 2030 to help stem biodiversity loss.
Investors can play a part by taking biodiversity into account in their investment strategies and one approach is to invest in financial products that track a biodiversity-related index, like the ISS STOXX Biodiversity Indices.
Capital is allocated on the basis of four elements (i.e. avoid, minimize, enable, and decarbonize) that work together to reduce biodiversity loss. A company’s impact can be measured by the following biodiversity data from ISS ESG:
- Norm-based filters
- Product involvement screening
- Biodiversity filters
- ISS ESG Biodiversity Impact Tool
- Sustainable Development Goals
The ISS STOXX Biodiversity Indices can provide a comprehensive framework to help investors integrate biodiversity considerations into their portfolios.
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