WBF2026-759, updated on 10 Mar 2026
https://doi.org/10.5194/wbf2026-759
World Biodiversity Forum 2026
© Author(s) 2026. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Oral | Wednesday, 17 Jun, 11:00–11:15 (CEST)| Room Aspen 1
The Balance Methodology: aligning carbon markets with indigenous knowledge for greater emissions reduction, biodiversity protection, and social co-benefits
Dan Morrell, Felix Dodds, Oliver Rieche, and Albertus Abbing
Dan Morrell et al.
  • Balance Eco Ltd. , United Kingdom of Great Britain – England, Scotland, Wales (dan@balance.eco)

Despite the greater public awareness of transparency and ethics shortcomings of carbon markets, UNFCCC Article 6 of the Paris Agreement guidance has remained ambiguous and continues to lack a common regulatory framework, even under the recently proposed “units” of Article 6.4. Little support has been offered for methodologies which require greater coverage of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and no global regulatory oversight mechanism has been proposed. These issues, coupled with the limited enforcement authority of existing binding agreements, collectively limit the abilities and motivation of both state and non-state actors to confidently contribute to (inherently global) voluntary and compliance carbon markets. This structural failure places the burden of regulatory oversight on individual countries, limiting the number of scrutinized investments, maintaining loopholes for actors with misaligned incentives, requiring tenuous diplomacy to oversee cross-national projects, inconsistently valuing national forest assets, and, crucially, preserving the disconnect between efficacious climate policy and the ethical, sustainable development of local communities. This article presents the 'Balance' approach to carbon finance and sustainable development, which focuses on the following three pillars: (1) the creation of biodiversity and (2) social-economic community benefits in helping to (3) holistically address the climate crisis. The Balance methodology is demonstrated to align with the emerging global discourse on Nature Positive actions and Nature-based Solutions (NbS). By integrating climate action with biodiversity conservation and social-economic co-benefits—Balance Eco's three pillars—this methodology creates the potential for an economy of scale that goes beyond traditional carbon finance. This addresses a wider range of UN SDGs, links ecological restoration with livelihoods, health, and community resilience, and thereby strengthens the systemic value of natural capital. In addition to the Marston Vale case study, we highlight an ongoing project in Honduras within the Plan Vivo system, where we are currently collecting data. This site is providing important insights into how the Balance methodology can be adapted to diverse ecological and socio-economic contexts, further demonstrating its applicability and capacity to deliver measurable, long-term benefits at multiple scales.

How to cite: Morrell, D., Dodds, F., Rieche, O., and Abbing, A.: The Balance Methodology: aligning carbon markets with indigenous knowledge for greater emissions reduction, biodiversity protection, and social co-benefits, World Biodiversity Forum 2026, Davos, Switzerland, 14–19 Jun 2026, WBF2026-759, https://doi.org/10.5194/wbf2026-759, 2026.