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Nature-Powered Energy Transition: Financing Nature as Core Infrastructure – News
Reframing Nature as Infrastructure
Keynote speaker Erik Berglöf, Chief Economist at the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), outlined how the bank is integrating nature into development finance. From wetlands in Mongolia to mangrove protection in Brazil, the approach includes natural capital valuation, policy-based financing, and public-private partnerships.
“Nature is not a side concern—it is part of the operating system of our infrastructure,” Berglöf said.
AIIB’s policy-based financing model allows direct lending to governments to support climate and nature policies. A $1 billion loan to Brazil, for example, includes frameworks for mangrove management and climate-resilient health systems, illustrating how planetary health can be built into infrastructure finance. In China, AIIB’s Nature Finance Accelerator mobilises private investment through taxonomy-based project classification and carbon credit markets.
AIIB’s pilot project in Mongolia shows how ecosystem service valuation can expand the scope of infrastructure investments—from flood management to pollination, carbon sequestration, and recreation—prompting local authorities to scale up restoration efforts. This evidence-based approach positions nature as an asset rather than a cost.
©IUCN – Moderator Rachel Asante-Owusu, (IUCN), Erik Berglöf (AIIB), Stewart Maginnis (IUCN) Banks and Investors Demand Measurable Nature Impact
Representing European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), Adonai Herrera Martínez highlighted the dual goals of financial returns and measurable environmental impact. He emphasised the critical role of IUCN in advocacy, guidance, and verification—helping financial institutions define metrics, develop methodologies, and link investments to actual improvements in the state of nature.
Energy Sector Scaling Up Renewables Responsibly
Patricia Claverie from TotalEnergies spoke about the urgency of scaling renewable energy at unprecedented speed while mitigating ecological impacts. Using IUCN’s guidance during the repowering of a wind farm on Réunion Island, the company was able to redesign the project with fewer turbines, lower impact, and a stronger biodiversity action plan.
Karen Westley of Ipieca underscored the power of industry collaboration: through Ipieca’s global network, lessons learned from IUCN partnerships can be shared across 60% of the oil and gas sector, amplifying systemic change.
©IUCN – Patricia Claverie (TotalEnergies), Karen Westley (Ipieca) Beyond Safeguards: Incentives and Long-Term Gains
Speakers stressed the need to move beyond compliance toward incentivised, long-term conservation gains. This includes biodiversity credits, embedding nature into licensing and tendering, and developing financial mechanisms that sustain ecological benefits beyond the operational life of projects.
Radical Partnerships for a Nature-Positive Future
Closing the session, Stewart Maginnis, Deputy Director General of IUCN, called for radical partnerships that place biodiversity conservation at the heart of the global energy transition.
“Mainstreaming biodiversity in energy systems isn’t optional. It’s how we ensure a just and sustainable future.”
Follow-up actions identified during the event include developing simple, robust nature finance methodologies with IUCN; ensuring long-term conservation gains beyond project lifecycles; and creating economic incentives to reward nature-positive infrastructure investments.
The session showcased how aligning finance, energy, and conservation can help build resilient economies and ecosystems—treating nature not as an afterthought, but as essential infrastructure.
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1886 Fall 2025 at Riyadh Fashion Week – WWD
- 1886 Fall 2025 at Riyadh Fashion Week WWD
- Vivienne Westwood’s granddaughter wages war on the brand: Why Cora Corré is ‘deeply unhappy’ with label over ‘homophobia’ and Saudi plans Daily Mail
- The best looks from Riyadh Fashion Week 2025 Gulf…
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“I have learnt to develop some kind of serenity
End of the line? Preuß weighs in on her future in biathlon
Preuß – or Franzi, as she’s known to those in the biathlon community – thought long and hard about her future in the sport over the summer, including a possible decision to…
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Rare case of pancreatic Hodgkin lymphoma is often misdiagnosed as pancreatic adenocarcinoma
A new case report was published in Volume 12 of Oncoscience on October 6, 2025, titled “A peculiar case of primary lymphoma of pancreas: A rare presentation of Hodgkin lymphoma.”
In this report led by first author Osama…
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Sidley Advises Xignux on US$5.28 Billion Sale of Stake in Prolec GE to GE Vernova | News
Sidley advised Xignux, a Monterrey, México-based leader in the energy and food industries, in connection with the US$5.275 billion sale to GE Vernova Inc. (NYSE: GEV) of its remaining fifty percent stake of Prolec GE, its joint venture with GE Vernova Inc., which was originally established in 1995. The deal reportedly marks the largest private transaction in México’s history, as reported by Reforma.
The sale will allow Xignux, which employs more than 33,000 people in México, the United States, and Brazil, to further invest in innovation, technology, and the expansion of its North American presence.
The Sidley team was led by Alyssa A. Grikscheit (Investment Funds and M&A) and Eduardo Marquez Certucha (Energy and Infrastructure), and supported by Mo Green (Private Equity), and Jessica Day (M&A).
Xignux received advice on legal matters from their in-house counsels Oscar Martinez Treviño, Teresa Villarreal Torres, and Federico de la Torre Herrera; with Creel, García-Cuéllar, Aiza y Enríquez, and Santos-Elizondo, providing local counsel in México, and Pinheiro Neto Advogados providing local counsel in Brazil; and on financial matters by J.P. Morgan Securities LLC.
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Bird flu is back. After a quiet summer, the virus has hit dozens of poultry flocks, killing nearly seven million farmed birds in the U.S. since the beginning of September. Among them: about 1.3 million turkeys, putting pressure on the run-up to Thanksgiving. – facebook.com
- Bird flu is back. After a quiet summer, the virus has hit dozens of poultry flocks, killing nearly seven million farmed birds in the U.S. since the beginning of September. Among them: about 1.3 million turkeys, putting pressure on the run-up to…
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Detection firm finds 82% of herbal remedy books on Amazon ‘likely written’ by AI | Books
With gingko “memory-boost tinctures”, fennel “tummy-soothing syrups” and “citrus-immune gummies,” AI “slop” has come for herbalism, a study published by a leading AI-detection company has found.
Originality.ai, which offers its…
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