Ringed kingfisher. Photo by Nick Hall, Avoiding Planned Deforestation and Degradation in the Valdivian Coastal Reserve, Chile (Verra Project 1175).
Verra has launched the first version of the Nature Framework, an asset methodology under Verra’s Sustainable Development Verified Impact Standard (SD VISta) Program. By enabling projects to quantify biodiversity outcomes and generate Nature Credits, the framework will incentivize widespread investment in measurable conservation and restoration activities benefiting nature and people. This is a testing version that will evolve over time based on the experiences of the initial projects.
The SD VISta Nature Framework will drive critically needed finance to biodiversity conservation activities. It will contribute to Target 19 of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, which calls for the mobilization of $200 billion per year for biodiversity from all sources, including through innovative schemes such as biodiversity credits with environmental safeguards.
Companies seeking to bridge this biodiversity funding gap can purchase Nature Credits to support critical nature conservation and restoration activities and their nature-positive outcomes. Buying Nature Credits will also help companies secure their nature dependencies into the future.
“Verra’s Nature Framework empowers project proponents to quantify their biodiversity benefits. This framework, shaped by insights from Indigenous Peoples and local communities, incentivizes investments that protect nature and benefit communities—it drives finance to projects that protect and restore ecosystems and generate tangible biodiversity outcomes. Our Nature Framework will result in measurable outcomes for the planet we share and the people who live on it.”
Mandy Rambharos, CEO, Verra
Nature Credits represent one percent of net biodiversity outcomes, measured in quality hectares (Qha), generated during a monitoring period as a result of the project intervention. Because biodiversity is not fungible and voluntary mechanisms are not suitable for like-for-like offsetting, voluntary nature/biodiversity credits should not be used as offsets to compensate for specific negative biodiversity impacts.
Verra’s Nature Framework acknowledges the critical role that Indigenous Peoples and local communities have in stewarding global biodiversity, and one of its central goals is to reward them for their efforts to protect and restore nature. The framework requires projects to follow a comprehensive set of social safeguards to obtain free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC), establish mutually agreed benefit-sharing mechanisms, and ensure genuine stakeholder participation throughout project design and implementation.
“Verra’s SD VISta Nature Framework embodies a win-win-win approach. It can help close the biodiversity funding gap, enable companies to contribute to this goal and their own nature-dependent future, and reward the incredibly important and valuable work of Indigenous Peoples and local communities who often are the real stewards of nature.”
Sinclair Vincent, Senior Director, Sustainable Development Program Development and Innovation, Verra
Webinar
On Wednesday, November 20, 2024, 11 am ET, Verra hosted a webinar to provide an overview of the Nature Framework.
The launch of the Nature Framework follows a robust and comprehensive consultation and piloting process (see “Development History” on the Nature Framework methodology page). Its development included a dedicated process of consulting with and learning from Indigenous Peoples. The framework also underwent an extensive piloting process during which select pilots tested the clarity, reasonableness, local appropriateness, scalability, and usability of the draft version.
Project Proponent
Project Name
Country
Wilderway ; Rewilding Portugal
Rewilding Côa Valley
Europe
Land Life & Nature Metrics
Soil biodiversity in a reforestation project in Spain
Spain
EarthAcre, East Africa Carbon and Biodiversity Limited
Making Community-Led Stewardship of BioDiversity a Financially Featsible Choice in Southern Kenya
Kenya
Forgotten Parks
Upemba Nature Credit Initiative
Democratic Republic of Congo
PUR
Regenerating Colombian Coffee Ecosystems
Columbia
Terra Global Capital
Amigos de Calakmul Community Conservation Forestry Project
North America
Wahkohtowin Development and Mikro-Tek
Missinaibi Boreal Biodiversity and Carbon Project
Canada
Conservation International
—
—
Terrasos
Aguadulce Habitat Bank
Colombia
rePLANET
Preventing Loss of Biodiversity in the High Nature Value Grasslands of Transylvania, Romania
Romania
Instituto Arapyaú
CocoaBiodiverse – Imporving Biodiversity in Cocoa Agroforestry Systems
Brazil
Kennemer Eco Solutions
Mindanao Forests For People and Sustainable Livelihoods (MinFor)
Philippines
Reforest Africa
Restoring the Kilombero Elephant Corridor
Tanzania
Great Barrier Reef Foundation, Central Queensland University
SeaGrow: Restoring resilient seagrass ecosystems on the Great barrier Reef
Australia
BioCarbon Partners (BCP)
Lower Zambezi Biodiversity Project (LZBP)
Zambia
Forest Carbon
Misool Foundation
Misool Coastal and Marine Ecosystem Conservation and Restoration Project
Indonesia
Ponterra
ARC Restaura Azuero
Panama
AJA Climate Solutions
Kwahu Landscape Restoration Project
Africa
Next Steps
Implementation, Continued Testing, and Development: As a next step, existing pilot projects meeting the requirements of the Nature Framework, v1.0 will be eligible to submit their project documents to Verra starting April 1, 2025, and may start generating Nature Credits. These initial projects will contribute their experiences to refining the methodology. While the framework’s requirements are based on existing best practices and recent scientific literature, testing these requirements with project data will be an essential next step in the further development of the framework.
Expert Panel: Verra plans to establish an expert panel to support the technical aspect of project development. Panel members will review each project description before it goes to validation, facilitating the selection of appropriate Condition indicators and crediting baselines.
Focus Areas: This testing phase will focus on further developing certain technical elements (e.g., leakage, Significance) and exploring and assessing different approaches for setting crediting baselines. Methods for setting crediting baselines for biodiversity are still in the early stages of development and rapidly evolving, specifically those regarding the collection of robust baseline data. As approaches are tested and more data becomes available, Verra will update its methodology as appropriate.
While the first version of the Nature Framework is designed to be generally applicable to all project contexts and aims, it may require further adaptation and refinement for specific biomes and/or contexts.
Nature Stewardship: In addition to the issuance of Nature Credits, Verra will continue to explore the feasibility of a nature stewardship pathway (i.e., measuring the impacts of continued maintenance of intact nature not under imminent threat). Details on Verra’s proposed path forward will be published in the weeks following the Nature Framework launch.
Continued Engagement: During the initial implementation phase of the Nature Framework, Verra aims to further build a community of practice that both enables projects to learn from each other and allows Verra to learn from each project as well as other standards/methodologies. Verra strives to help define this nascent but critically important market to ensure it embodies a set of consistent principles that all high-integrity programs meet.