Nature as Infrastructure: Palladium CEO Calls for Ecological Finance Reform

Amit Patjoshi, CEO of Palladium India, emphasized that nature-based solutions must be treated as core infrastructure assets to build climate resilience. He highlighted governance gaps, where degraded floodplains and wetlands exacerbate urban flooding during extreme weather. Patjoshi argued that sufficient funds exist, but the challenge is creating the right governance frameworks to attract private finance. The conclusion called for structural reforms to value and scale ecological solutions as assets within India's development strategy.

Key Points: Nature-Based Solutions Need Private Finance, Says Palladium CEO

  • Treat nature as infrastructure asset
  • Integrate ecology into planning
  • Mobilize private finance for resilience
  • Reform governance frameworks for scaling
3 min read

Building resilience through nature: Palladium CEO Amit Patjoshi calls for institutional reform and private finance

Amit Patjoshi argues for treating nature as core infrastructure, integrating ecological design, and attracting private investment for climate resilience.

"solutions do not work only with good intentions but with right intuitions, right governance frameworks - Amit Patjoshi"

New Delhi, February 26

At the recent climate change policy dialogue "Transformations through and for Nature at Durbar" on sustainable development and climate resilience, Amit Patjoshi, CEO of Palladium India, emphasized the urgent need to treat nature-based solutions as core infrastructure assets rather than peripheral environmental concerns.

Opening his remarks, he said, "The subject is quite enriching. There is an old Sanskrit is saying 'Prakriti Rakshit Rakshita' which means nature protects when protected." He noted that the COVID-19 pandemic reinforced this principle, adding, "An example of the same was given by Dr Viva during the covid time and I must say that while framing this session is what exactly right when we talk about how the wetlands the forest catchments close the run up of the floods the mangroves protect it is necessary to understand how such solution can be scaled in a sustainabale mod so that they thrive using the overall public budget."

Patjoshi stressed that resilience must move beyond public funding and become embedded within economic systems. "Today, we would be discussing how this developments resilience economy establish we can absolutely function in India looking at the ground challenges," he said, pointing to the realities faced by administrators during extreme weather events.

Highlighting governance gaps, he remarked, "All of us in this room probably relate when the DM gets a call there's heavy rains roads clogged immediate answer is what failed. When you go upstream look at forest it is not the drains it's the floodplains which has been degraded it is the wetlands which has been used as a parking lot that has led to the change of the overall ecosystem."

He argued that infrastructure planning must integrate ecological design principles. "Hence it is necessary at this point we integrate whatever designs we are doing in infrastructure it is mandatory for an enterprise that it is not coming back how exactly we scale up how exactly we attract private finance," he said, noting that funding is not the core constraint. "There are funds available there in no dearth of funds... solutions do not work only with good intentions but with right intuitions, right governance frameworks so that there is enough interest in finance."

Calling for structural reform, Patjoshi concluded that nature-based solutions should be valued as assets. "When we talk about science it is the architecture that matters... we should treat solutions as asset. Care should defined and should be used as an asset... when we talk about India how India can give and protect its nature enabling the benefits if it there are so many examples in India."

The discussion underscored a growing consensus that India's resilience strategy must align ecological restoration, institutional reform, and private investment to safeguard its future.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
"Prakriti Rakshit Rakshita" – such a powerful concept from our ancient texts. It's high time our modern development models remembered this wisdom. Integrating ecological design isn't a luxury, it's a necessity for survival.
V
Vikram M
He's right about the funds. The problem is never money, it's governance and intention. Look at our cities – wetlands become parking lots, floodplains become housing societies. Until the system holds people accountable, nothing will change.
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Priya S
While I agree with the sentiment, I wish there were more concrete examples of how private finance can be attracted. It's easy to say "treat it as an asset," but what's the revenue model for a protected mangrove forest? That's the real question.
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Rohit P
Absolutely spot on! Every time there's heavy rain, the blame game starts with municipal drains. No one looks upstream at the deforestation or wetland destruction that caused the problem. We need systemic change, not just quick fixes.
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Michael C
This is a global issue, but India has a unique opportunity to lead. The blend of ancient ecological wisdom and modern finance could create a model for the world. The key is execution and breaking down bureaucratic silos.
A
Ananya R

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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