Kakata, Margibi County; February 26, 2026: The corridors of the Kakata City Hall filled with the sound of greetings, pulled-back chairs, and the quiet anticipation of something significant.
Government institutions, development partners, and civil society organizations convened for a high-level validation workshop marking a major milestone in Liberia’s efforts to strengthen its biodiversity finance architecture.
Liberia stands at a pivotal moment. Its forests, rivers, and ecosystems remain among the richest and most diverse in West Africa, yet the financial systems meant to protect them are stretched thin and in need of reform.
The one-day session focused on validating the NaturePositive and NatureHarmful Subsidies and Incentives Assessment and the Biodiversity Expenditure Review (BER), a step toward addressing that challenge.
Standing before the room, the UNDP Project Manager and National Coordinator of BIOFIN Liberia captured what many in the hall already felt.
In his opening statement, Emmanuel Massaquoi underscored the importance of the workshop to national development, a significant step toward a NaturePositive Future.
“This validation workshop marks a significant step forward in strengthening Liberia’s biodiversity finance architecture. Today’s deliberations underscore the importance of aligning financial policies and public expenditures with sustainable environmental outcomes.
Your contributions are invaluable as we move toward finalizing these two critical reports, which will guide national action and inform key policy reforms,” Massaquoi noted.
He said the active engagement of stakeholders from government, development partners, and civil society demonstrates a shared commitment to moving toward finalizing the two critical reports which will build a naturepositive future and guide national actions and inform key policy reforms
The workshop was not just a technical review—it was a moment of alignment.
Representatives from the Ministry of Finance and Development Planning, the EPA, FDA, MOA, MME, MOPW, civil society groups, and development partners sat side by side, united by ashared recognition that Liberia must finance its nature more intelligently, more sustainably, and more urgently.
Key Technical Findings Presented
The session featured detailed technical presentations, group work, and plenary-level analysis that allowed stakeholders to thoroughly review and validate the methodologies, data, and recommendations in both reports that could reshape biodiversity financing.
Mr. Darlington S. Tuagben, Lead Consultant, presented the major findings of the Subsidies and Incentives Assessment, outlining financial mechanisms that either support or undermine naturepositive outcomes and incentives that can be redesigned to promote positive environmental outcomes.
Mr. Andy S. Gbatu, UNDP Biodiversity Finance Analyst, presented the Biodiversity Expenditure Review, a meticulous mapping of national biodiversity expenditures, attribution rates, and gaps across sectors.
Gbatu highlighted national spending patterns, gaps, and opportunities for more efficient biodiversity-related investments.
Both men painted a detailed picture of how Liberia currently finances—or unintentionally undermines—its biodiversity goals.
Their presentations sparked energetic discussions. Participants huddled in small groups over worksheets, crosschecking data, debating attribution rates, and validating assumptions.
They engaged in robust group work sessions to validate Biodiversity Attribution Rates (BAR) and refine expenditure data, ensuring that the final documents accurately reflect national realities and priorities.
For many, this was the first time they had seen such a comprehensive breakdown of how Liberia funds its environmental priorities.
“We Are Building Something That Will Outlive Us”
The energy in the room was not transactional, but it was generational. Stakeholders understood that they were laying the financial foundation for Liberia’s transition toward a nature-positive development path.
They demonstrated strong commitment to improving Liberia’s biodiversity finance planning through constructive dialogue, methodological validation, data harmonization and a review of actionable recommendations.
One participant from the government said quietly during a group session, “These reports will help us understand what we are doing right—and what we must stop doing. We are building something that will outlive us.”
Civil society leaders nodded in agreement. For them, the day was about transparency—about finally seeing the numbers behind policy commitments.
A Turning Point for Policy Reform
By midafternoon, the validation was complete. Both reports—refined through debate and strengthened through collaboration—received stakeholder endorsement.
The implications are far-reaching:
- Clearer identification of harmful subsidies will allow Liberia to redirect funds toward naturepositive alternatives.
- The Biodiversity Expenditure Review offers a structured baseline for national budgeting and long-term financing strategies.
- Together, the reports will guide the development of a critical next step under the BIOFIN global framework.
What emerged was a shared understanding that financial policy and environmental stewardship cannot remain separate. They must move together.
The validated documents will serve as foundational inputs to the development of Liberia’s Biodiversity Finance Plan, a strategic roadmap to support the country’s transition toward a sustainable, nature-positive development model.
Toward a NaturePositive Liberia
As the workshop closed, a sense of purpose lingered in the hall. Liberia now has two validated tools capable of reshaping how the country funds its natural heritage.
The Project Manager’s final words echoed long after the participants gathered their papers and prepared to leave Kakata.
“Aligning financial policies with sustainable environmental outcomes is no longer optional—it is essential.”
With these validated reports, Liberia edges closer to building a resilient, well-financed environmental future—one where biodiversity is not an afterthought but a national investment priority.
About the Liberia Biodiversity Finance Initiative (BIOFIN)
Implemented by UNDP, BIOFIN supports countries to develop evidence-based finance strategies that protect and sustainably manage biodiversity.
The Liberia component is carried out in partnership with national government institutions and is funded by the European Union, Ireland, and Sweden.