Interoperability as the Key: BIO-CAPITAL Publishes Policy Brief on Biodiversity Finance

The BIO-CAPITAL Team © Oikoplus
BIO-CAPITAL aims to contribute to evidence-based policy formulation. An initial policy recommendation on financing mechanisms for the protection of biodiversity has now been drawn up and published.
Europe is investing billions in biodiversity protection and restoration — and yet private capital barely flows into this space. Why? The BIO-CAPITAL project went looking for an answer and found one: not in a shortage of data, not in a shortage of financial instruments, but in a structural gap between the two.
The newly published policy brief “Interoperability by Design” makes this finding plain. Ecological monitoring systems and financial reporting frameworks simply speak different languages. The CAP and the Nature Restoration Regulation generate valuable biodiversity data — but that data is not structured in a way that investors, banks, or insurers can actually use.
Three Recommendations for the National Restoration Plans
The timing of this publication is no coincidence. EU Member States are required to submit their National Restoration Plans (NRPs) by 1 September 2026. BIO-CAPITAL sees this as a unique opportunity — and responds with three concrete recommendations.
First, NRP monitoring frameworks should be designed from the outset so that ecological data can flow directly into financial decision-making — in particular by aligning with ESRS E4 and the EU Taxonomy.
Second, restoration measures should be structured so they can be bundled into investable portfolios, supported by blended finance mechanisms and dedicated technical assistance for smaller actors. Third — and perhaps the most urgent message — the data infrastructure for biodiversity monitoring must be built on open, interoperable standards from day one. Interoperability does not emerge on its own: it must be actively constructed. Retrofitting it later is more expensive and rarely complete.
A Window That Is Closing
BIO-CAPITAL’s research findings show that the problem is not data scarcity — it is data fragmentation. Even publicly available satellite data such as Sentinel or Landsat is practically impossible to combine across sources due to divergent licensing conditions and access restrictions. That costs time, money, and ultimately biodiversity-investment appetite.
🔗 Download the full policy brief here:
