UNEP: Harmful Investments 30x Greater Than Protection

Nairobi, 22 January 2026 For every US$1 the world invests in protecting nature, it spends US$30 on destroying it. This stark imbalance is the central finding of a new UN Environment Programme (UNEP) report released today. It calls for a major shift in global financing of nature-based solutions and phasing out harmful investments to deliver high returns, reduce risk exposure, and enhance resilience.

The State of Finance for Nature 2026 which uses data for 2023 finds:

US$ 7.3 trillion in total nature-negative finance flows

  • with US$ 4.9 trillion from private sources highly concentrated in a few sectors: utilities, industrials, energy, and basic materials) and
  • public environmentally harmful subsidies to fossil fuels, agriculture, water, transport and construction of US$ 2.4 trillion in 2023
  • US$ 220 billion in NbS finance flows, with close to 90% coming from public sources reflecting a steady rise in domestic and international support for NbS.
  • Private investment in NbS amounted to only US$ 23.4 billion - 10 per cent of total NbS investments. Business and finance have yet to invest at scale in NbS despite the growing awareness of dependencies, risks, and opportunities related to nature.
  • NbS investments need to grow 2.5 times to US$ 571 billion per year by 2030. This constitutes just 0.5% of global GDP (in 2024).

If you follow the money, you see the size of challenge ahead of us. We can either invest into natures destruction or power its recovery there is no middle ground, said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of UNEP. While financing nature-based solutions crawls forward, harmful investments and subsidies are surging ahead. This report offers leaders a clear roadmap to reverse this trend and work with nature, rather than against it.

Since reforming and repurposing private and public capital flows is the most powerful tool to shift markets toward sustainability, the report introduces a new Nature Transition X-Curve, a framework designed to help policymakers and businesses sequence reforms and scale up high-integrity NbS across all sectors of the economy.

The framework charts a path for phasing out harmful subsidies and destructive investment in entrenched systems of production, while simultaneously scaling up NbS and nature-positive investments. It offers specific options to public and private sector businesses across the supply chain.

The worlds financial flows need an urgent shift from degrading the environment to investments in nature-based solutions said H.E. Reem Alabali-Radovan, Minister for Economic Cooperation and Development, Germany. The private sector plays a key role in this. German development policy supports partner countries in valuing their natural capital so that it can be taken into account in key policy decisions. This can lead the way to a sustainable and future-proof economy.

The Nature Transition X-Curve also offers roadmaps to meet the challenge of a trillion-dollar nature transition economy. The report highlights examples of how this is already being applied by governments and business leaders around the world: Greening urban areas to counter heat-island effects and improving liveability for citizens; embedding nature in road and energy infrastructure; producing emissions-negative building materials using carbon dioxide.

A crucial principle in nature-positive investments is to ground them in local ecological, cultural, and social contexts, while ensuring their inclusivity and equity.

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