生物多样性 ›› 2026, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (1): 25299.  DOI: 10.17520/biods.2025299  cstr: 32101.14.biods.2025299

• 生物多样性保护融资与企业参与专题 • 上一篇    下一篇

生物多样性信用机制: 中外实践比较与启示

王茜璐1, 王禹兮2, 王也1, 赵阳1, 王新1*   

  1. 1. 生态环境部对外合作与交流中心, 北京 100035; 2. 首都经济贸易大学金融学院, 北京 100026
  • 出版日期:2026-01-20 发布日期:2026-02-09
  • 通讯作者: 王茜璐, 王禹兮, 王也, 赵阳, 王新

Comparative analysis of biodiversity credits mechanisms in China and abroad and implications for China

Qianlu Wang1, Yuxi Wang2, Ye Wang1, Yang Zhao1, Xin Wang1*   

  1. 1 Foreign Environmental Cooperation Center (FECO), Ministry of Ecology and Environment (MEE), Beijing 100035, China 

    2 School of Finance, Capital University of Economics and Business, Beijing 100070, China

  • Online:2026-01-20 Published:2026-02-09
  • Contact: Qianlu Wang, Yuxi Wang, Ye Wang, Yang Zhao, Xin Wang

摘要: 《昆明-蒙特利尔全球生物多样性框架》提出将生物多样性信用作为一种新兴融资工具, 助力弥补资金缺口。《中国生物多样性保护战略与行动计划(2023–2030年)》倡导“建立市场化生物多样性保护恢复补偿机制”。为了解生物多样性信用机制发展, 本文采用案例比较法, 从信用量化、政策推行与市场交易3个方面, 对美国、英国、澳大利亚等国案例与国内实践(江西湿地银行、福建南平生态银行和浙江丽水生态信用评价)的比较结果显示, 我国生物多样性补偿机制需进一步增强政策强制力、核算科学性与市场活跃度, 并在注重“经济等效性”的同时, 更加关注“生态等效性”和惠益分享公平性。建议“三步骤”实施路径: (1)制定方法学, 为生物多样性信用量化提供科学性、标准化和透明度, 并经第三方机构认证增加市场认可度。(2)通过自下而上的试点成功交易, 为自上而下的法律政策提供必要的决策依据。(3)在供给侧平衡优化经济等效性: 通过国家公园立法, 赋予保护者将保护成果转化为生物多样性信用获利的权利, 包括经营性(信用交易)和投资性(信用融资)权利; 在需求侧提升强化生态等效性: 强化开发者满足生物多样性“无净损失”专门规定的义务, 通过修订《生态保护补偿条例》和《环境影响评价法》纳入生物多样性损益量化、生态稀缺性评估, 层级缓解、影响抵消和信用有效期 ≥ 30年等核心要求; 最终, 在信用供需两侧形成“法律规范+市场激励”双轮驱动模式, 成为促进绿水青山向金山银山转化的有效机制。

关键词: 生物多样性信用, 生物多样性抵消, 昆明-蒙特利尔全球生物多样性框架

Abstract

Background & Aim: Biodiversity credit is the ecological measure of biodiversity gain and loss, quantifying the results of ecological conservation into standardized units that can be traded. Through the creation and sale of biodiversity credits, it can provide a market solution for biodiversity financing. To elucidate the evolutionary trajectory and developmental trends of biodiversity credit mechanisms, this study employs a comparative case study approach. It contrasts international frameworks—specifically those implemented in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia—with domestic initiatives in China. These include the Jiangxi Wetland Banking, Fujian Nanping Forest Ecological Banking, Zhejiang Lishui Eco-Credit Evaluation, and biodiversity-themed green bonds. The analysis is structured around three key dimensions: the methodology for credit accounting, the system of constraints and incentives, and the market-based operational model. Analysis of China’s biodiversity compensation mechanism has revealed three core deficiencies: weak policy enforceability, non-standardized scientific accounting, and insufficient market activity. The root cause of these shortcomings can be attributed to the mechanism’s predominant focus on economic compensation. This approach prioritizes “economic equivalence” at the expense of “ecological equivalence”, thereby failing to ensure the functional integrity of the ecosystems being compensated. 

Suggestions: We propose a three-step implementation pathway: First, develop methodologies to ensure scientific rigor, standardization, and transparency in quantifying biodiversity credits, with third-party certification to enhance market recognition. Second, facilitate successful bottom-up pilot transactions to provide essential decision-making support for top-down legal and policy frameworks. Efforts should be made on both sides. Supply side: enact national park legislation to grant conservationists the right to monetize conservation outcomes as biodiversity credits; Demand side: mandate developers to comply with specific obligations for achieving “no net loss” of biodiversity by revising the Regulations on Ecological Protection Compensation and the Environmental Impact Assessment Law. This includes incorporating core requirements such as quantifying biodiversity gains and losses, assessing ecological scarcity, implementing mitigation hierarchy and offsetting measures, and ensuring a credit validity period of ≥ 30 years. Only with “legal compulsion + market incentives” model successfully put into effect, can biodiversity credit become an effective mechanism to support high-quality development goals, and help make lucid waters and lush mountains become invaluable assets.

Key words: biodiversity credits, biodiversity offsetting, Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (KMGBF)