Climate

Implementing the EU Nature Restoration Law: exploring pathways for member states

The European Union Nature Restoration Law (NRL) entered into force in 2024. The NRL sets quantitative restoration targets aimed at improving natural habitats that are currently in poor condition, with substantial leeway for countries to choose implementation pathways that fit their priorities.

This Working Paper examines three pathways: (1) evenly spreading restoration efforts across all ecosystems; (2) prioritising cost-efficiency; and (3) maximising carbon sequestration. Each approach yields vastly different outcomes. This paper provides insights into the trade-offs.

For countries seeking to minimise costs in the short run, an 81 percent reduction in costs over the period 2025-2030 is possible compared to a baseline scenario of an even restoration of all ecosystems. Countries that aim to maximise carbon sequestration benefits can achieve a 54 percent increase in climate impact over the same period. However, the different pathways converge after 2040. Prioritising cost minimisation in the early years could lead to higher costs later if delays in investment in the more costly restoration projects allow habitats to continue to degrade.

Maximising cost-efficient carbon sequestration is possible, allowing relatively low investment costs and high sequestration. Countries should adopt a holistic approach to pathway selection, considering the full spectrum of ecological and societal gains alongside climate mitigation.

Land ownership is an important factor that shapes feasible and effective pathways. In countries such as Spain and Germany, where private entities own substantial shares of agricultural and forest lands, policies should incentivise private investment, including through norms, subsidies or pricing mechanisms. Countries with substantial public landholdings, such as the Netherlands, may find it easier to implement direct restoration projects. These structural differences will influence the cost and pace of restoration and also the design of policies and governance mechanisms to ensure compliance with NRL targets.

Source : Bruegel

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

Nvidia CEO joins Trump’s thorny trade mission to China

Trump embarks on the ‌first visit by a U.S. president to China in nearly a…

1 day ago

The different effects of oil and gas supply shocks on euro area inflation

The surge in energy prices since March 2026 has revived questions about the pass-through to…

1 day ago

The impact of emissions trading systems on manufacturing installation productivity: Evidence from Japan

Emissions trading systems have been widely studied globally, but less attention has been paid to…

1 day ago

Dollar rises but still not far from pre-war levels, data awaited

Given the likelihood of elevated inflation readings, the CPI on Tuesday and PPI on Wednesday.…

2 days ago

AI rally fizzles as Middle East ceasefire goes on ‘life support’

Oil rises, stocks fall as Middle East ceasefire falters and Strait of Hormuz remains blocked.…

2 days ago

Gold falls as fading Middle East peace hopes lift dollar, oil

Trump to visit China this week, ​to discuss Iran ⁠with Xi. Gold fell from a…

2 days ago