Governments, businesses, and lenders worldwide are adopting an objective of no net loss (NNL) of biodiversity that is often partly achieved through biodiversity offsetting within a hierarchy of mitigation actions. Offsets aim to balance residual losses of biodiversity caused by development in one location with commensurate gains at another. Although ecological challenges to achieve NNL are debated, the associated gains and losses for local stakeholders have received less attention. International best practice calls for offsets to make people no worse off than before implementation of the project, but there is a lack of clarity concerning how to achieve this with regard to people's use and nonuse values for biodiversity, especially given the...
AbstractDevelopment-induced biodiversity losses continue unabated because most developments invariab...
© The Ecological Society of America Biodiversity offsets are most commonly used to mitigate the adve...
Increasingly, government and corporate policies on ecological compensation (e.g., offsetting) are re...
Governments, businesses, and lenders worldwide are adopting an objective of no net loss (NNL) of bio...
Governments, businesses and lenders worldwide are increasingly adopting a ‘No Net Loss’ (NNL) object...
‘No net loss’ (NNL) biodiversity policies, which seek to neutralize ongoing biodiversity losses caus...
Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The AuthorsIn the face of the ongoing biodiversity crisis, questions are...
1. Biodiversity cannot always be conserved. Economic development activities can result in biodiversi...
No net loss (NNL) biodiversity policies mandating the application of a mitigation hierarchy (avoid, ...
Biodiversity offsetting is the widely studied last step of the mitigation hierarchy. Despite numerou...
Economic development projects are increasingly applying the mitigation hierarchy to achieve No Net L...
Most programmes which incentivise the supply of public goods such as biodiversity conservation on pr...
Biodiversity offsetting is the practice of using conservation actions, such as habitat restoration, ...
‘No net loss’ (NNL) biodiversity conservation policies are increasingly widespread, and yet highly c...
Highlights • Biodiversity offsets rarely include participatory methods to involve local people ...
AbstractDevelopment-induced biodiversity losses continue unabated because most developments invariab...
© The Ecological Society of America Biodiversity offsets are most commonly used to mitigate the adve...
Increasingly, government and corporate policies on ecological compensation (e.g., offsetting) are re...
Governments, businesses, and lenders worldwide are adopting an objective of no net loss (NNL) of bio...
Governments, businesses and lenders worldwide are increasingly adopting a ‘No Net Loss’ (NNL) object...
‘No net loss’ (NNL) biodiversity policies, which seek to neutralize ongoing biodiversity losses caus...
Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The AuthorsIn the face of the ongoing biodiversity crisis, questions are...
1. Biodiversity cannot always be conserved. Economic development activities can result in biodiversi...
No net loss (NNL) biodiversity policies mandating the application of a mitigation hierarchy (avoid, ...
Biodiversity offsetting is the widely studied last step of the mitigation hierarchy. Despite numerou...
Economic development projects are increasingly applying the mitigation hierarchy to achieve No Net L...
Most programmes which incentivise the supply of public goods such as biodiversity conservation on pr...
Biodiversity offsetting is the practice of using conservation actions, such as habitat restoration, ...
‘No net loss’ (NNL) biodiversity conservation policies are increasingly widespread, and yet highly c...
Highlights • Biodiversity offsets rarely include participatory methods to involve local people ...
AbstractDevelopment-induced biodiversity losses continue unabated because most developments invariab...
© The Ecological Society of America Biodiversity offsets are most commonly used to mitigate the adve...
Increasingly, government and corporate policies on ecological compensation (e.g., offsetting) are re...