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In light of the 16th Conference of the Parties (COP16) to the Convention on Biological Diversity, Sri Lanka’s financial and environmental strategies are under the spotlight as it struggles to address the urgent funding needs for biodiversity. This meeting aims to advance the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) goals, especially Target 19, which seeks to mobilize $200 billion annually for global biodiversity. The identified funding gap stands at a substantial $700 billion annually, a pressing issue for countries like Sri Lanka facing economic constraints.
Sri Lanka’s biodiversity challenges are severe, with declining wildlife populations, significant deforestation, and loss of vital natural ecosystems. Between 2001 and 2023, the country saw a reduction of 222,000 hectares of tree cover, a critical blow to both biodiversity and essential ecosystem services. Conservation of biodiversity in Sri Lanka also has broader socio-economic implications, as many rural livelihoods, essential exports, and even clean water supplies are directly linked to healthy ecosystems. The government launched a ‘30×30’ initiative in 2024 to conserve 30% of its land and marine areas by 2030, highlighting a critical national commitment amid financial challenges.
Efforts to bridge the biodiversity financing gap include a sustainable finance roadmap by Sri Lanka’s Central Bank and work on a green bond framework. However, understanding around biodiversity finance remains limited, often conflated with climate finance, which largely emphasizes clean energy over agriculture and nature-based solutions. As biodiversity gains interest from global investors and multilateral agencies, there are promising avenues for Sri Lanka to attract funding through conservation finance, green bonds, and other nature-positive investments.
As COP16 deliberates, Sri Lanka aims to set a success story by prioritizing biodiversity despite its debt challenges, creating a blueprint for a nature-positive economy that benefits communities, corporations, and the environment.
Sumber:
https://www.csf-asia.org/financing-biodiversity-and-nature-amidst-debt-distress-in-sri-lanka/
https://thediplomat.com/2023/08/climate-finance-must-be-part-of-sri-lankas-debt-solution/
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