Natural Assets Initiative

Making Nature Count

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Invest in Nature

The Natural Assets Initiative (NAI) is changing the way municipalities deliver everyday services, increasing the quality and resilience of infrastructure at lower costs and reduced risk.

The NAI team provides scientific, economic and municipal expertise to support and guide local governments in identifying, valuing and accounting for natural assets in their financial planning and asset management programs and developing leading-edge, sustainable and climate-resilient infrastructure.

NAI teams up with local governments to develop resilient, long-term infrastructure alternatives at substantial savings. NAI employs practical strategies to value nature’s ability to provide municipal services and to incorporate this information into mainstream asset management systems. With increasing ease in measuring and valuing natural assets the NAI approach is straightforward and transferable.

Apply — NAM Roadmap Program

Is your local government new to natural asset management (NAM)? The Natural Asset Management Roadmap Program is a low effort, high impact starter program to support local governments identify NAM priorities, capacities, build awareness across departments, and develop next steps to integrate NAM in your asset management practices.?

NAI is currently accepting applications, with special subsidies for local governments in Ontario and Atlantic Canada insured by Intact Public Entities.

News and Developments

natural creek with fast moving, blurred water
City of West Kelowna, BC

Making Nature Count

Natural assets reduce service delivery costs

Managing areas such as aquifers, forests, and wetlands reduces service delivery costs and improves engineered assets efficiency.

Natural assets have a perpetual life span

Engineered assets must be replaced after their lifespan ends. Some natural assets, on the other hand, can provide services in perpetuity. They can become more valuable over time with effective monitoring, maintenance and restoration.

Natural assets support climate change adaptation

Some natural assets are resilient and can meet increased service delivery requirements under predicted climate change scenarios, meaning that their value can grow over time.

In communities across Canada

NAI has worked with nearly 100 communities to explore nature’s ability to provide municipal services as a long-term, cost-effective and climate-resilient solution to aging infrastructure.

Receive regular updates on our activities, progress and developments

Get in touch

We are happy to provide you with more information or answer any questions you may have. Let us help you make nature count.







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