Featured: Countries sign onto a joint declaration on ocean and climate action Arrow Featured: 10 ocean events to watch out for at COP28 Arrow Featured: Read the new report: The Ocean as a Solution to Climate Change Arrow Featured: Read the Ocean Panel Leaders joint communiqué issued at the 2023 UN General Assembly Arrow Featured: Ocean Panel members issue joint statement on sustainable tourism at the Our Ocean Conference Arrow Featured: New members strengthen Ocean Action 2030’s mission for a sustainable ocean economy, read more Arrow Featured: Read up on Ocean Panel Activities at the Our Ocean Conference, Panama Arrow Featured: Read the 2022 Sustainable Tourism Report and Accompanying Expert Perspectives Arrow

Ocean Finance for the Sustainable Ocean Economy

Launched 6 June 2025, the working paper ‘Ocean Finance for the Sustainable Ocean Economy’ presents a critical assessment of the state of global ocean finance and the transformative actions needed to align financial flows with a sustainable ocean economy.

The analysis reveals that current investments fall significantly short of the estimated $550 billion annually required to secure long-term ocean health. Despite the ocean’s vital role in climate regulation, food security, and livelihoods, less than 1% of official development assistance and philanthropic funding is directed toward ocean sustainability. Fragmented financial structures across sectors and agendas—such as biodiversity and climate—further undermine impact and coherence.

Without a shift in course, the economic risks are considerable. Harmful and unsustainable ocean practices could result in more than $8 trillion in losses by 2050. Redirecting financial flows toward sustainable activities—supported by robust governance, fiscal reform, and integrated planning such as Sustainable Ocean Plans—can drive resilience and shared prosperity.

The paper highlights the promise of innovative and blended finance mechanisms, including blue bonds, guarantees, and debt-for-nature swaps, to unlock capital at scale. Evidence suggests that every $1 invested in ocean solutions could yield at least $5 in global benefits by 2050, yet such tools remain underutilised and poorly adapted to the ocean context.

Crucially, the paper underscores the need to build ocean finance literacy and prioritise equity, particularly for Small Island Developing States (SIDS) and Least Developed Countries (LDCs). These nations, custodians of critical marine biodiversity, often face structural barriers to accessing finance. Addressing these gaps through concessional funding, technical support, and capacity-building is essential to ensure all nations can meaningfully participate in and benefit from a sustainable ocean economy.

https://doi.org/10.69902/ef05410a


"Ocean Finance for the Sustainable Ocean Economy"

Close
back to top