TY - JOUR
T1 - Designing financial instruments for land-based ecological restoration
T2 - A review and future research Agenda
AU - Garvey, John
AU - Grigoriadis, Vasilis
AU - Flannery, Darragh
AU - Knapp, Edward
AU - Gold, Elizabeth
AU - Hutchinson, George
AU - Frewer, Lynn J.
AU - Brereton, Paul
AU - Byrne, Kenneth A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2025/6
Y1 - 2025/6
N2 - Land restoration requires innovative approaches to prevent ongoing degradation and increase the functionality of land use. While land restoration has been studied extensively from the perspective of ecologists and local communities it is a topic that remains at the periphery of the financial economics literature, despite the global financial system's centrality to the problem. This paper reviews the literature on financial instruments that are designed for land-based ecological restoration, extracts key learnings from this literature and deploys a functional perspective to better understand how financial instruments that aim to scale up land restoration activities can be mainstreamed within the global financial system. This paper presents a framework that promotes public channels to best direct public and private capital towards land restoration projects. Matching the supply of capital with a pipeline of spatially explicit and sometimes unique restoration solutions requires an architecture that can implement this coordination and aggregation function. This has the potential to mitigate transaction costs and improve transparency issues associated with monitoring and reporting. This framework is illustrated for an actual land restoration program underway in Europe.
AB - Land restoration requires innovative approaches to prevent ongoing degradation and increase the functionality of land use. While land restoration has been studied extensively from the perspective of ecologists and local communities it is a topic that remains at the periphery of the financial economics literature, despite the global financial system's centrality to the problem. This paper reviews the literature on financial instruments that are designed for land-based ecological restoration, extracts key learnings from this literature and deploys a functional perspective to better understand how financial instruments that aim to scale up land restoration activities can be mainstreamed within the global financial system. This paper presents a framework that promotes public channels to best direct public and private capital towards land restoration projects. Matching the supply of capital with a pipeline of spatially explicit and sometimes unique restoration solutions requires an architecture that can implement this coordination and aggregation function. This has the potential to mitigate transaction costs and improve transparency issues associated with monitoring and reporting. This framework is illustrated for an actual land restoration program underway in Europe.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212853498&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.clpl.2024.100089
DO - 10.1016/j.clpl.2024.100089
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85212853498
SN - 2666-7916
VL - 8
JO - Cleaner Production Letters
JF - Cleaner Production Letters
M1 - 100089
ER -