From Walden to Wall Street: Frontiers of Conservation Finance
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In the absence of innovation in the field of conservation finance, a daunting funding gap faces conservationists aiming to protect America's system of landscapes that provide sustainable resources, water, wildlife habitat, and recreational amenities. Experts estimate that the average annual funding gap will be between $1.9 billion and $7.7 billion over the next forty years. Can the conservation community come up with new methods for financing that will fill this enormous gap? Which human and financial resources will allow us to fund critical land conservation needs?
From Walden to Wall Street brings together the experience of more than a dozen pioneering conservation finance practitioners to address these crucial issues. Contributors present groundbreaking ideas including mainstreaming environmental markets; government ballot measures for land conservations; convertible tax-exempt financing; and private equity markets.
The creativity and insight of From Walden to Wall Street offers considerable hope that, even in this era of widespread financial constraints, the American conservation community's financial resources may potentially grow dramatically in both quantity and quality in the decades to come.
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From Walden to Wall Street - James N. Levitt
America.
Preface
Genesis
The book you are now reading is the outgrowth of a spirited, wide-ranging series of discussions among senior North American conservation executives, field practitioners, and researchers. The Lincoln Institute of Land Policy convened this series of Conservation Leadership Dialogues (CLDs) in 2002, 2003, and 2004 to bring together exceptional talents from diverse organizations in the public, private, nonprofit, and academic sectors. Participants came from large and small operations scattered throughout the continent, including a small land trust in New Mexico, federal government agencies in the United States, an activist group with offices in British Columbia, a multinational timber investment organization based on the East Coast of the United States, and several of the continent’s most distinguished universities.
These Lincoln Institute dialogues were convened for the purpose of considering some of the grand challenges and opportunities facing the land and biodiversity conservation community in North America. Our scope was broad and our time horizon was expansive. We were free, for example, to discuss the potential efficacy of very large scale initiatives that spanned national boundaries and cultural differences. We considered the possible impact of such initiatives throughout the course of decades and even centuries. After several sessions that brought into focus what might be accomplished in a broad range of disciplines and practice areas, we got down to business. We focused on a topic about which nearly every participant had a strong opinion and abundant experience: money. More specifically, the first of the three CLDs, held at the Lincoln Institute’s headquarters in Cambridge, Massachusetts, was focused on Conservation in the Twenty-first Century.
The invited participants addressed the challenge posed to them by keynote speaker E.O. Wilson, the celebrated biodiversity scientist. We have entered the twenty-first century, the century of the environment,
Wilson declared. The question of the century is, how can we best shift to a culture of permanence, both for ourselves and for the biosphere that sustains us?
¹ One of the most compelling answers offered to his challenge was that we must find ways to dovetail the efforts of a multiplicity of North American landowners into landscape-scale initiatives that can sustain a full spectrum of species and ecosystems.
Responsive to the interest shown in landscape-scale initiatives, the second CLD, held in San Francisco in May 2003, focused on the great potential and significant hurdles faced by groups striving to launch such regional landscape-scale efforts.² At the end of a productive three days of field trips and structured discussions of the issue, participants reiterated their conviction that we should aim to sharply increase the pace of land and habitat conservation efforts in North America and around the world. They also expressed the unanimous view that in order to pick up the pace of conservation, the community must become more capable in conservation finance, thus facilitating the generation of new human resources, institutional resources, and capital resources. Toward that end, the group expressed a strong interest that the following year’s CLD be devoted to innovation in conservation finance.
Accordingly, the 2004 CLD, convened in the spring of that year at Lincoln House in Cambridge, focused on the following challenge:
How might the conservation community, by leveraging new and emerging institutional capacities and financing techniques, dramatically increase the level of financial resources per year that is annually dedicated to land and habitat conservation in the U.S.? Could we, over the next several decades, double or triple the level of capital funds devoted to conservation (i.e., build substantially on an estimated current level of $5 billion to $7 billion per year from public, private, and nonprofit sources)?
To address this challenge in a structured format, the authors prepared discussion papers focused on the following questions:
What is the present institutional capacity for doing
conservation finance, and how might that capacity be augmented in coming years to improve the system of finance
serving land and habitat conservationist initiatives and organizations?
What are the current and prospective supply and demand of human and financial resources available to meet conservation finance needs in the United States? How does the level of resources available now compare to perceived requirements in coming decades?
What concepts, methods, and tools, involving the public, private, and nonprofit sectors, hold some promise for dramatically expanding the annual amounts of financing available for land and habitat conservation and stewardship?
At the conclusion of the conference, there was a strong consensus, among both discussion paper authors and other CLD participants, that the session had been highly productive and that we should share our ideas with a broader audience. We resolved to rewrite the essays based on comments made at the meeting and to compile the essays into a book—this book.
The authors and editors of From Walden to Wall Street have worked diligently to put together a volume that reflects both our passion for conservation and the professional practicality that is essential in the world of finance. Our considerations range from the musings of Henry David Thoreau—the personification of the Walden
point of view—to the findings of Patrick Coady, a veteran of Wall Street and the World Bank, and one of this book’s authors.
The resulting work brings together the thinking of sixteen sophisticated conservation finance practitioners who are, every day at their desks, inventing the future of their field. It is our sincere hope that such a compilation will be of considerable utility to a broad range of readers, including board members, executives, field practitioners, and financial officers of conservation organizations seeking to expand their own financial horizons; professionals serving (or hoping to serve) such organizations in their efforts to raise capital and operating funding, including investment bankers, commercial bankers, strategic consultants, lawyers, and accountants; professors, students, and academic researchers seeking to understand the ongoing maturation of the conservation field; policy makers and their staffs, scouting out new ways to achieve conservation goals of enormous significance to today’s voters, their children, and generations to come; and interested members of the general public who are thinking through how to invest in the future of essential natural systems.
The Chapters of This Book
In chapter 1, I attempt to put innovation in conservation finance in a historical perspective. I point out that innovation in the field of conservation is a long-standing U.S. tradition, dating back to 1634 and the establishment of the Boston Common. As is evidenced by the chapters of my coauthors in this book, that tradition is still very much alive today.
Chapter 2 addresses the question of institutional capacity for doing
conservation finance. Patrick Coady finds the existing state of affairs still in a formative stage. He provides a concise, compelling case for putting together several disparate components into a system of finance that can efficiently and effectively make financing available to worthy conservation initiatives. These necessary components of a conservation financing system, as Coady describes them, include project identification and preparation; provision of catalyst money; provision of bridge financing; provision of access to large, long-term financial instruments; and creation of new ownership models. Coady’s insights are particularly valuable because they are based on a series of interviews that he conducted with senior conservation finance practitioners over the course of several years. Once such a system emerges, Coady believes, the process of getting deals done in the conservation field will more closely resemble that of the relatively efficient financial market that now serves private companies.
Chapter 3, prepared by Frank Casey from Defenders of Wildlife, is a much-needed effort to roughly size the supply and demand of capital required to complete an ecologically and taxonomically comprehensive system of conservation lands
in the United States. Casey estimates that in the aggregate, across funding sectors and conservation methods, the total supply of conservation funding in the United States in 2003 was about $5.8 billion. Source sectors tallied in this estimate included federal and state government and nonprofit funding. Such funding included allocations for permanent land protection ($2.7 billion of the $5.8 billion total, including fee purchases and easements), nonpermanent conservation land rentals,
and cost-sharing programs that encouraged more sustainable production practices. Compared with the cost of assembling a comprehensive system of conservation lands (that is, the potential demand for conservation funding), Casey estimates an average annual funding gap of between $1.9 billion and $7.7 billion over a forty-year time