naturevest

Private Investors Can Make an Impact on Conservation

Aaron Paul leads Washington Chapter in undertaking innovative financing

Written by Jeanine Stewart, Volunteer Writer

As investing for social and environmental benefit alights more and more fires in the hearts of investors nationwide, we are launching a plan to wrap investors into our fundraising goals in a big way.

We welcome Yale graduate Aaron Paul as our first Conservation Investments Project Director for the Washington chapter of The Nature Conservancy. We’ve set an ambitious goal to raise $200 million in private sector investment for conservation over the next five years. This funding will leverage the gifts and grants that the chapter receives to get more conservation done with existing resources.

The time is right for this new direction. The Conservancy’s global impact investing unit, NatureVest, estimates private investments in conservation will triple over the next five years, as investors around the world make big commitments to generate a positive impact and a financial return with their investment capital.

Impact investors, rather than measuring the attractiveness of an investment solely on the basis of its potential to reap monetary returns, intentionally put money into ventures that have the potential to bring both positive impact and financial returns.

This group is growing worldwide. NatureVest expects investments in conservation to triple over the next five years – from $2 billion in 2015 to $6 billion. Other experts are also seeing growth. Analysis by JP Morgan Chase of 146 impact investors around the world showed that 98 percent of the respondents planned to invest more in 2015 than the year prior, and as a whole the group’s investment plans amounted to $12.2 billion for 2015 – 16 percent more than the $10.6 billion invested in 2014. 

The trend reverberates to major pockets of the global investment community. In the Silicon Valley, it’s becoming so cool for investors to have their name on projects that preserve forests and prevent against human rights abuses that discussions at the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Sustainable Foods Institute last spring centered around investors steering their focus away from simply chasing return through the tech boom, and into businesses that could be the next big thing in societal problem solving.

Meanwhile, Matthew Bishop, Senior Editor of The Economist Group, expects financial organizations like BlackRock and Bain Capital to continue rolling out impact investment commitments this year as the Ford Foundation’s prior commitments start having impact.

At the national level, the Nature Conservancy already engaged with impact investors in half a dozen key ways last year, CEO and President Mark Tercek noted in a Conservancy Talk blog in January.

All the hype, however, doesn’t exactly equate to an easy sell.

“It’s going to be challenging,” Paul says. “There aren’t precedents set in the area that we’re working on.”

With no formula for monetizing environmental benefits and no traditional structure in place for these types of deals, it’s up to Paul to, virtually invent the conservation impact investing wheel for Washington state.

Now, he’s honing a few ideas to maximize investor and environmental benefits in tandem. For instance – what if there were a way to purchase timberland for conservation while generating revenue? It’s possible investors could through sustainable timber harvests, carbon credit sales, and tax incentives, says Paul.

He’s also working with an idea to enable coastal communities to acquire fishing permits and maintain them in local trusts. This would keep economic development assets local while entrusting the natural resource with conservation-minded managers.  

These are just some pitches Paul may take to investors. When talking to him about the process, it’s clear by his measured explanations that the wheels of his mind are turning quickly around a vast and complex range of innovations.

Regardless of which ideas become reality, Paul seems likely to pour his heart into winning investors over. He, after all, first dreamed of working for the conservancy as an intern while in graduate school for business and environmental management at Yale.

“I always wanted to land here,” he says. 

LEARN MORE ABOUT OUR URBAN CONSERVATION WORK

LEARN MORE ABOUT NATUREVEST

tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o1_1280.jpg
tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o2_1280.jpg
tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o3_1280.jpg
tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o4_1280.jpg
tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o5_1280.jpg
tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o6_1280.jpg
tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o7_1280.jpg
tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o8_1280.jpg
tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o10_1280.jpg
tumblr_nmyrn68eEC1tt4iu9o9_1280.jpg

A Bird’s Eye View of Our Home

Written by Melissa Garvey, Deputy Director, The Nature Conservancy in Washington
Photography by John Marshall

What better way to take in our region’s natural beauty than by flying over it in a plane. I got to take a very special flight with my colleagues at NatureVest, a Nature Conservancy initiative that creates innovative financing for conservation. Joining us were NatureVest’s advisory board and leaders from the sustainable finance team at JP Morgan Chase.

On a stunningly clear Spring day, we shared a remarkable vantage point from which we could see the tremendous breadth and beauty of nature in our region, while considering some of the challenges and opportunities we have to conserve it.

An aerial view of the Cedar River Watershed was a reminder of the great investment made in this forest decades ago. It holds and protects the water Seattle relies upon. But the land around the watershed is fragmented and in need of restoration.

Approaching the cascade crest, we were reminded of the amazing potential of conservation finance. Working with NatureVest, we protected 48,000 acres of forestland with the use of innovative financing. But there is much more to do to restore forests to health on both sides of the cascades.

Working lands, rivers and Puget Sound come together in the Skagit Valley. This area is critical for agriculture, salmon and the health of the sound. It was also the first time I’ve seen our Port Susan Bay and Fisher Slough projects from above - innovative work that is having an impact!

Next stop – the beautiful San Juan Islands! From a plane they look pristine. But growing vessel traffic is increasing pollution and the risk of oil spills. There are big opportunities for conservation to protect the marine environment that is so critical to our well-being.

From there we flew over the Elwha River restoration site– the largest dam removal in history. The Elwha River now flows freely from its headwaters in the Olympic Mountains to the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The sediment once trapped behind the dams is rebuilding critical habitats, vegetation is being restored, and salmon and trout are naturally migrating past the former dam site for the first time in over 100 years.

An inspiring view of the Olympic mountain range brought to mind the need for summit-to-sea conservation to protect wildlife, Native culture, and irreplaceable environment. Looking out to the coast and the remarkable Emerald Edge we saw big opportunities for large scale impact across geographic boundaries.

Turning back towards Seattle, the urban environment came back into focus. This is where the majority of our state’s population makes their homes. To create sustainable cities, we must address stormwater runoff. By engaging leaders and creating innovative green solutions, we can restore the health of Puget Sound for people and nature.

The bird’s eye view of our region highlights how much is a stake as we work to conserve and restore the place we call home. Together we can shape the future for nature and for people.