working paper

Public International Funding of Nature-Based Solutions for Adaptation: A Landscape Assessment

Stacy Swann Laurence Blandford Sheldon Cheng Jonathan Cook Alan Miller Rhona Barr
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6. CONCLUSION

The results of this research show there is a long way to go to improve overall flows for NbSA and, in turn, to see NbSA investments realized and implemented in developing countries. Although the funding landscape shows low levels of funding today, donor and country interest in NbSA has accelerated rapidly in recent years. It is likely that future assessments will paint a different picture, including where funding is flowing from and which countries and regions are receiving support.

Research and interviews have highlighted how much work is needed to define and quantify NbSA at the project investment level, and there is growing interest across the donor and multilateral development community to invest in the necessary methods, tools, and approaches that can support scaling up NbSA investment. It is widely accepted that investments in NbSA support public goods that enhance the ability of countries and communities to adapt to climate change and to better withstand disasters when they occur.

For developing countries where domestic budgets may be constrained, an immediate and important opportunity exists to integrate NbS investments (writ large) into post-COVID economic recovery planning to reap a range of immediate and long-term climate resilience benefits. Furthermore, doing so has the potential to bring about a more robust (and resilient) post-COVID recovery, increase economic growth, create jobs, and yield other long-term positive development impacts.

Today, public capital is often still a decisive factor in determining whether an NbSA project is implemented and its benefits realized. Investing in NbSA at scale will require both greater investment levels from public and private sources and, importantly, improved coordination among many stakeholders, including developing country policymakers and planners, project developers, and communities, all of whom have diverse interests and incentives. This coordination is key, in part because the crosscutting nature of NbSA can make such interventions more complex. The need to build the capacity of all of these stakeholders to develop investable NbSA project pipelines cannot be overstated.

This paper’s recommended actions provide an initial road map that can help each of these stakeholders build the right systems, approaches, and tools to enable the scaling up of NbSA investments while maximizing both the effectiveness of donor funding for NbSA and the ability of developing countries to become resilient in the face of climate change.

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