World Bank launches scheme to green govt accounts

NAGOYA, Japan,  (Reuters) – The World Bank yesterday launched a programme to help nations put a value on  nature just like GDP in a bid to stop the destruction of  forests, wetlands and reefs that underpin businesses and  economies.

The five-year pilot project backed by India, Mexico and  other nations aims to embed nature into national accounts to  draw in the full benefits of services such as coastal  protection from mangroves or watersheds for rivers that feed  cities and crops.

“We’re here today to create something that no one has tried  before: a global partnership that can fundamentally change the  way governments value their ecosystems,” World Bank President  Robert Zoellick told reporters in the Japanese city of Nagoya.

More than 100 ministers are in Nagoya for a U.N. meeting  that aims to seal a historic deal to set new 2020 targets to  combat the rapid loss of plant and animal species from  deforestation, pollution, over-hunting and climate change.

One of the targets before the ministers is to agree to  include the values of biological diversity into national  development plans, or possibly national accounts.

“For economic ministries in particular, it’s important to  have an accounting measure that they can use to evaluate not  only the economic value but the natural wealth of nations,”  Zoellick told Reuters in an interview.

“It’s not a silver bullet. It’s a way of trying to help  people understand better in economic terms the value of natural  wealth.”

While economists try to get a handle on the value of  nature, scientists are struggling to get a full picture of the  variety of wildlife species around the globe as climate change,  exploitation and pollution threaten “mass extinctions”, a  series of studies published on Wednesday showed.

Envoys at the Japan meeting, the product of years of  negotiations, are trying to win agreement on a 20-point plan  that aims to protect fish stocks, fight the loss and  degradation of natural habitats and conserve larger land and  marine areas.

Greater financing from rich nations, possibly through  redirecting subsidies from the fossil fuel, fishing and other  industries is key.

Envoys are also aiming to clinch by today a new pact that  sets laws for the sharing of genetic resources between  governments and companies, such as drug and agri-resources  firms.

Poorer nations want greater controls to protect their  environment and to potentially earn billions of dollars in  extra revenue from the benefits of trees to fungi, insects to  frogs.

Delegates and greens say the talks are making progress  ahead of today’s deadline but were still deadlocked on some  issues and negotiations were expected to continue deep into the  night.

“There is definitely a positive atmosphere,” Norwegian  Environment Minister Erik Solheim told Reuters. “Everyone wants  to reach a consensus here.”