Nature-based Solutions to address global societal challenges

Nature-based Solutions to address global societal challenges

The report defines NbS as actions aimed at protecting, sustainably managing, and restoring natural or rehabilitated ecosystems to effectively address societal challenges (such as climate change, food/water security, and natural disasters) while benefiting humans and biodiversity.

Key aspects of NbS:

Overall concept: NbS is a comprehensive concept encompassing many ecosystem-related approaches, including ecological restoration, ecoengineering, green infrastructure, ecosystem-based management, and regional conservation.

Operating principles: NbS interventions must adhere to conservation standards, be context-aware, promote broad participation, maintain biodiversity, and balance immediate economic benefits with the ability to provide long-term ecosystem services.

Operating Framework: The report proposes five operating parameters to assess the effectiveness and sustainability of NbS: ecological complexity, long-term stability, scale of ecological organization, direct social benefits, and adaptive governance.

Applications and Significance:

NbS is not a replacement for conventional engineering solutions but can be combined to achieve greater effectiveness.

Case studies from the US, Japan, Rwanda, Ecuador, Jordan, Costa Rica, Spain, and the Guatemala/Mexico region show that NbS enhances community resilience to natural disasters, improves livelihoods, and ensures water security.

Agreeing on an operating framework is a necessary step to standardize, scale up implementation, and strengthen the impact of NbS in addressing global challenges.