• About Us
  • Editorial Team
  • Cyber ​​Media Guidelines
  • Karir
  • Kontak
Thursday, June 4, 2026
AsiaToday.id
  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • GREEN ENERGY
  • TRAVEL
  • EVENT
  • SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
  • CORPORATION
  • FORUM
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • GREEN ENERGY
  • TRAVEL
  • EVENT
  • SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
  • CORPORATION
  • FORUM
No Result
View All Result
AsiaToday.id
No Result
View All Result
Home STUDY AND ENVIRONMENT

Investing in Nature Key to Asia-Pacific’s Future Prosperity—ADB Report

The Asia-Pacific Climate Report 2025 offers a 10-year roadmap to integrate nature into the region’s economic and financial systems for a more resilient future

by Editor Asiatoday
October 30, 2025
in STUDY AND ENVIRONMENT
Reading Time: 2 mins read
A A
0
Investing in Nature Key to Asia-Pacific’s Future Prosperity—ADB Report

Asian Development Bank (ADB) headquarters. Special

ASIATODAY.ID, MANILA — Protecting ecosystems could unlock major gains in jobs, productivity, and fiscal resilience, according to a new Asian Development Bank (ADB) report. Investing in nature is vital, the report notes, as 75% of the region’s output comes from sectors that depend moderately or heavily on nature which is degrading at an alarming rate.

The Asia-Pacific Climate Report 2025: Unlocking Nature for Development calls on governments to make protecting nature a core part of how their economies operate. It urges countries to upgrade their “operating system”—the governance, policy, and data foundations that guide investment—to create the enabling conditions for private finance to flow into conservation, resilience, and innovation.

“Healthy ecosystems are not environmental extras in the region’s growth story. They are productive assets at the core of Asia’s growth and resilience,” said ADB Chief Economist Albert Park on October 30, 2015.

RelatedPosts

Securing Carbon Credits for Smallholder Farmers

Indonesia Faces Methane Emergency as ASEAN and South Korea Launch $20 Million Climate Waste Initiative

AMAN and UNESCO Lead Safety Training for Indigenous Women Journalists in Makassar

“Countries that invest in nature are investing in their own competitiveness and fiscal stability.”

Nature remains undervalued and underfinanced. Of more than $270 trillion in global financial assets, about $200 billion a year—under 1%—supports nature-positive investments. These include sustainable farming, such as growing diverse crops that improve soil and biodiversity, or using wetlands and mangroves, which not only manage floods but also improve water quality, store carbon, and support fisheries. Closing the biodiversity and climate financing gap in Asia and the Pacific will require over $1 trillion annually.

Public finance should focus on building the systems that attract private investment, says the report. By directing public resources toward governance, policy, and data reforms, governments can unlock large-scale private capital for nature-positive growth.

The report presents a 10-year road map to help economies bring nature into economic and financial systems, recognizing that each is starting from a different place. It calls for near-term actions including subsidy reform, natural-capital accounting, and planning at the right spatial scale, which can extend beyond national borders. Longer-term reforms focus on aligning governance, data, and finance to deliver both environmental and economic benefits.

Economies in Asia and the Pacific are already taking steps to value nature as productive capital and are well positioned to lead the world in upgrading their economic systems to sustain long-term prosperity. Development finance institutions like ADB can play a key role in unlocking nature’s potential for development by mobilizing finance, providing technical assistance and fostering regional cooperation.

ADB is a leading multilateral development bank supporting inclusive, resilient, and sustainable growth across Asia and the Pacific. Working with its members and partners to solve complex challenges together, ADB harnesses innovative financial tools and strategic partnerships to transform lives, build quality infrastructure, and safeguard our planet. Founded in 1966, ADB is owned by 69 members—50 from the region. (AT Network)

Follow Us at Google News and WA Channel

Tags: Asian Development BankClimate ActionGreen Investmen
No Result
View All Result

Terbaru

  • Indonesia: UN Experts Condemn Military Trial in Acid Attack Case Targeting Human Rights Defender Andrie Yunus
  • Indonesia’s Rupiah Hits Record Low as OECD Warns Economy Is Falling Behind Vietnam
  • Indonesia’s Massive Free Meals Program Set to Reach 85 Million Beneficiaries
  • Corruption Scandal Hits Indonesia’s Free Meals Program as Former Nutrition Chiefs Are Jailed
  • Indonesian Nickel Downstreaming: IPIP Pomalaa Urged to Avoid IMIP and IWIP Pitfalls
  • About Us
  • Editorial Team
  • Cyber ​​Media Guidelines
  • Karir
  • Kontak

© 2022 Asiatoday.id - Asiatoday Network.

Welcome Back!

OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • GREEN ENERGY
  • TRAVEL
  • EVENT
  • SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
  • CORPORATION
  • FORUM

© 2022 Asiatoday.id - Asiatoday Network.