No more excuses for inaction on biodiversity
Karel Nierop, Head of Products and Solutions, Triodos Investment Management
Note: The views expressed on these pages are the opinions of their respective author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of UKSIF.
This website should not be taken as financial or investment advice or seen as an endorsement or recommendation of any particular company, investment or individual. While we have sought to ensure information on this site is correct, we do not accept liability for any errors.
No more excuses for inaction on biodiversity
Karel Nierop, Head of Products and Solutions, Triodos Investment Management
The loss of animals, plants and our natural ecosystem poses a threat to our economy and humanity. Institutional investors are increasingly considering biodiversity loss to be a material risk for their investments. However, capital allocation is lagging, despite the availability of good and profitable solutions that make sense.
Many pension funds are still hesitant to fully embrace biodiversity as an investment theme. The numerous definitions and the high level of abstraction may contribute to this reluctance. But it can be simple: biodiversity ensures that nature functions properly and more than 50% of the global economy depends on this.
Biodiversity loss should be regarded equally as seriously as climate change for that reason alone. Like climate change, biodiversity loss is a systemic risk. Biodiversity loss destroys precisely what we depend on economically. Once you recognise that, the rest follows logically: investment policy, selection criteria and accountability to participants.
No more excuses for inaction
Pension funds are mainly struggling with the practical implementation of a biodiversity strategy. My advice: don’t wait too long and recognise biodiversity loss as a material risk at least.
A common objection is that it is difficult to measure the impact of biodiversity investments and therefore difficult to account for them to stakeholders and participants. But that should not be an excuse for inaction.
There are plenty of starting points for creating a framework. The main causes of biodiversity loss are now clear: climate change, pollution, habitat loss and overexploitation. And measurable indicators already exist for these, such as soil health, species diversity and land use.
Also, new technology is making it increasingly easier to measure these indicators. Satellite data and drones can be used to map changes in land use and soil quality over time. Echo technology can be used to measure a forest’s species diversity based on sound. AI models are improving analysis, pattern recognition and predictions.
A biodiversity strategy limits risks
There are plenty of opportunities to take the first steps, for example in regenerative agriculture or forestry. They have stable cash flows and a low correlation with financial markets. That dynamic does not change because you start farming in a more nature-inclusive way or manage forests differently.
In fact, a biodiversity strategy can actually reduce risks. Regenerative agriculture improves soil quality, which makes an area less vulnerable to flooding or drought. Healthy soils, for example, retain more water. These are all factors that not only protect and improve biodiversity, but ultimately also have an impact on financial returns.
There is a serious danger in sticking to conventional models. If you continue to invest in unsustainable agriculture or forestry, you run the risk of these becoming the ‘stranded assets’ of the future. Models that deplete the soil are financially unsustainable in the long term. Research and practice show that nature-inclusive models are more sustainable and financially profitable.
In addition, we are seeing the emergence of ‘payments for ecosystem services’ (PES): financial compensation for providing or maintaining ecosystem services, such as carbon sequestration, water purification or biodiversity restoration. The best-known example of this are carbon credits, but PES is broader than that. For example, a sustainable forest manager can receive compensation from a drinking water company for improving the quality and availability of water downstream. In July 2025, the EU published a Nature Credits Roadmap to boost private investment in nature-positive actions. This will enable nature conservation to provide an additional source of income, underpinned by measurable impact and reliable contractual agreements.
A good start…
Pension funds should look beyond a separate ‘biodiversity portfolio’. Biodiversity is not a separate asset class. It is a systemic risk that should be taken into account in every investment category.
For listed equities and bonds, the focus is on limiting negative impact. Companies that damage biodiversity also pose a financial risk.
For those who want to go further than exclusion, there are concrete solutions with a positive impact. We are talking about financing sustainable land use, water management and sustainable food production; economic activities that we depend on every day. Many of these solutions can be found in private markets.
Bundling and scaling up small projects
You don’t have to reinvent the wheel. There are specialist fund managers with decades of experience in this field. We have been building sustainable agricultural supply chains since the 1990s.
An example: Triodos Investment Management is currently developing a real assets strategy with a Canadian pension fund, focusing on regenerative agriculture and sustainable forest management in Europe and North America.
By working with local partners who really understand sustainability and bundling smaller investments into a fund structure, you can achieve a positive biodiversity impact on a larger scale, making it interesting for parties that want to allocate larger sums.
Note: The views expressed on these pages are the opinions of their respective author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of UKSIF.
This website should not be taken as financial or investment advice or seen as an endorsement or recommendation of any particular company, investment or individual. While we have sought to ensure information on this site is correct, we do not accept liability for any errors.