UBS Group AG has warned that investors have largely undermined the effects of biodiversity loss.
UBS Chair Colm Kelleher and Chief Executive Officer Sergio Ermotti wrote in a study published by the bank’s sustainability and impact institute on Monday that, “biodiversity loss requires just as swift action as climate change.”
And that it requires a “new wave of transition finance, governmental resolve and stakeholder partnerships.”
Most corporations and investors have not given the same importance to biodiversity as they have to climate change, according to the study. They tend to not analyze the capital risk behind the loss of awareness and implementation.
The result has been that “private capital allocation, corporate actions, and consumer behaviors mostly ignore its value in their everyday activities,” the UBS study said.
In recent years, green investing has primarily focused on climate change, leaving biodiversity overlooked.
The UBS study argues that this narrow perspective is “shortsighted” given that nearly two-thirds of the economy relies to some extent on biodiversity.
Analysts at Barclays Plc pointed out last year that not accurately assessing biodiversity risk can lead to loss of value and possible legal issues.
Some investors are actively seeking opportunities to benefit from the distorted asset prices that arise when corporations and governments overlook the value of natural capital.