The authors also highlight how NbS can create ‘win-win’ scenarios, such as raising income and creating jobs while enhancing biodiversity and supporting climate adaptation. These attributes make NbS an essential approach for countries as they transition to clean and efficient circular economies.
Specific examples covered by the research include the Working for Water* (WfW) programme in South Africa, which cleared invasive species from over 1 million hectares of land while supporting over 20,000 jobs, and a coastal restoration project in the United States which created 17 jobs for every US$1m spent.
Nature’s value is often overlooked in accounting frameworks, yet our study highlights its tremendous economic benefits. At a time when global systems are under strain and the planet is warming, nature-based solutions offer a vital opportunity to boost the resilience of ecosystems—and the economies that depend on them.
Nathalie Seddon, Professor of Biodiversity at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment and Department of Biology, University of Oxford
‘The evidence also shows NbS can be deployed with speed and flexibility in areas where they are needed the most, like rural communities that are often neglected by other investment approaches,’ says Alex Chausson, lead author of the study, NbS specialist at WWF-UK, and Research Associate at Oxford’s Nature-Based Solutions Initiative (NbSI). They are important tools for stimulating local economies, especially during recovery from crises, he adds.
However, the authors identify several factors that are holding NbS back, including siloed government decision-making, widespread misconceptions that pro-environmental policies can harm business, and a lack of reporting on the broader impacts of NbS projects.
‘Right now, when a government makes an investment in nature, all too often they are failing to look at the wider impact that investment is having,’ explains Chausson. ‘The immediate impact of restored woodland on biodiversity might be monitored, for example, but the broader benefits of the project on jobs or the resilience of the local community to climate change will not be. If these aspects are considered, it will lead to better policy decisions.’
‘It’s clear that well-designed investments in nature can create jobs, deliver high economic productivity, and enhance resilience, offering a powerful response to economic shocks,’ affirms Dr Brian O’Callaghan, co-author and Lead Researcher and Project Manager at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment. ‘But investors and policy makers must take a cautious approach to ensure key stakeholders are not left behind and unexpected negative externalities are avoided.’
Following best practice standards for NbS is crucial to make sure benefits are delivered in practice, explains Alison Smith, co-author and Senior Research Associate at the NbSI. ‘We found that community involvement in NbS design and delivery was a key factor for making sure that benefits are distributed fairly, and helping to avoid trade-offs,’ she says. ‘Integrating traditional, local and scientific knowledge can also really help to improve the outcomes of NbS for both nature and people’.
Harnessing nature-based solutions for economic recovery: a systematic review was funded by the Oxford Martin School’s Biodiversity & Society Programme. The authors analysed evidence from 66 carefully selected ‘review’ papers on nature-based solutions, each encompassing evidence from multiple studies. To the authors knowledge, their study is the first comprehensive review of the economic impacts of NbS.
“The University of Oxford is a collegiate research university in Oxford, England. There is evidence of teaching as early as 1096, making it the oldest university in the English-speaking world and the world’s second-oldest university in continuous operation.”