UW Economist Selected as Lead Author for Intergovernmental Biodiversity Report

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University of Wyoming economist Jake Hochard, the Knobloch Associate Professor of
Conservation Economics in the Haub School of Environment and Natural Resources, was
nominated by representatives of the White Office of Science and Technology Policy
to contribute to an international assessment of how businesses affect and rely on
nature.

The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services
(IPBES), an independent intergovernmental body that works to strengthen the science-policy
interface for biodiversity and ecosystem services, has gathered experts and practitioners
from around the world to contribute to the report.

Hochard will represent the United States in serving as a lead author for the assessment’s
second chapter that focuses on how business benefits from biodiversity across the
globe. In addition to Hochard, the team supporting the second chapter includes experts
and practitioners nominated by the governments of South Africa, Colombia, Republic
of Korea, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, Zimbabwe, Malaysia and Finland.

Hochard is an environmental economist whose work combines geospatial analysis, mathematical
modeling and empirical analysis to examine feedback between natural and human systems
— with the goal of engaging with stakeholders to support natural resource policy
development and management decisions.

“I’m thrilled and humbled to join this international effort,” Hochard says. “Whether
it’s wildlife driving ecotourism, tropical plants supporting pharmaceutical discovery
or pollinators promoting crop production, the links between biodiversity and business
are critical, and collating them in this chapter will be an exciting contribution.”

The assessment is expected to take up to two years and also will examine how business
impacts biodiversity; approaches for measurement of how business benefits from and
impacts biodiversity; options for businesses to serve as key actors of change; and
how civil society, governments and the financial sector can create an enabling environment
for businesses to support biodiversity conservation.

The first in-person meeting of the group’s lead authors will be in Bogota, Colombia,
in later this month.

IPBES is not a United Nations body, but the United Nations Environment Programme provides secretariat services to the group.

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