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Ecosystem tipping points: Understanding the risks to the economy and the financial system

Authored by Lydia Marsden, Josh Ryan-Collins, Jesse Abrams and Timothy Lenton

Ecosystem tipping points: Understanding the risks to the economy and financial system

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  • Ecosystem tipping points: Understanding the risks to the economy and the financial system

This policy report is part of the UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose’s (UCL IIPP) publication series.

Explore more working papers and policy reports here.

 

Download the report

UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose (IIPP) policy report no. 2024/03

Authors: 

  • Lydia Marsden | Research Fellow in Sustainable Finance | UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose
  • Josh-Ryan Collins | Professor in Economics and Finance | UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose
  • Jesse Abrams | Senior Research Impact Fellow | Global Systems Institute, University of Exeter
  • Timothy Lenton | Chair in Climate Change and Earth System Science | Global Systems Institute, University of Exeter

Summary:

Stable natural ecosystems underpin all economic activity. Ecosystems provide the natural resources needed for production; regulate climate change and global rainfall patters; and provide resilience against natural disasters and the extremes brought on by global warming. 
 
Pressures on nature from human activity - such as land use change and pollution, as well as climate change - are increasing the risk of terrestrial ‘ecosystem tipping points’ (ETPs): non-linear, self-amplifying and irreversible changes in ecosystem states that can occur rapidly and on a large scale. 
 
Losing these critical ecosystems will severely impact the economy through reduced food and energy security; damages to assets such as real estate; croplands and infrastructure; and health risks that impair household productivity. The direct impacts of ETPs can reverberate globally and extend far beyond the regions where these ecosystems are located, not least through the amplifying effect that ETPs would have on climate change. 

This means ETPs are highly relevant for central banks and financial supervisors’ understanding of how nature loss can affect the economy and financial system. The scale of environmental breakdown posed by ETPs necessitates a precautionary approach. This must focus on rapidly eliminating negative drivers to prevent thresholds being crossed ex ante, including exploring the role of the financial sector in facilitating these drivers (known as “double materiality”). Improved modelling can and should play a role, but the fundamental uncertainty associated with ETPs means these exercises are more suited for exploring risks rather than managing then. 

Ultimately, this approach will need to be led by governments, and requires central banks and financial supervisors to coordinate with policymakers in ministries of finance, industry and environment to fulfil their primary mandates of price and financial stability.

Reference:

This report can be referenced as follows:

Marsden, L., Ryan-Collins, J., Abrams, J., and Lenton, T. (2024). Ecosystem tipping points: Understanding risks to the economy and financial system. UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose, Policy Report 2024/03. Available at: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/bartlett/public-purpose/2024/apr/ecosystem-tipping-points

This policy report is part of the UCL Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose’s (UCL IIPP) publication series.

Explore more working papers and policy reports here.

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