Why Natural Asset management
Sustainable
Engineered assets have a limited lifespan, but some natural assets can provide services in perpetuity — they grow more valuable over time, providing liveable cities for future generations
Cost-Effective
Manages existing assets such as forests or wetlands reduces service delivery and maintenance costs while improving engineered assets’ efficiency
Climate Resilient
As living infrastructure, many natural assets last longer & perform better under increasing pressures from climate change compared to traditional-only approaches
Most Recent Posts
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Where are they now? Oakville
Natural assets prove unexpectedly valuable in Oakville’s stormwater management Second in a series of posts on activities of the 5 original community…
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And then there were 11
The next five community projects testing natural asset management across Canada are underway. The communities are: City of Courtenay and the District…
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Opportunity for a municipal natural assets project in a BC watershed: extended
In municipalities across Canada, infrastructure is aging, capital and operating costs are rising, and service delivery is strained by growing populations and shifting conditions. Solutions…
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A game-changing approach
British Columbia, as with other Canadian provinces, is looking at ways to meet its emissions reduction targets. When the province’s auditor general…
Our Partner Communities
Let’s work together on your
next Natural Asset project
NAI’s team collaborates with local, provincial and federal governments, Indigenous governments, watershed agencies, regulators, and professional associations to bring practical, scalable natural asset strategies mainstream.
Receive regular updates on our activities, progress and developments
Acknowledgement
We acknowledge Indigenous Peoples as the traditional stewards of Turtle Island, and that these lands are the ancestral and unceded territories of diverse Inuit, Métis, and First Nations. We commit to and are responsible for ensuring that natural asset management upholds UNDRIP. We continually seek ways to learn from the harms of the past and move our work forward in a spirit of reconciliation and collaboration.
Making Nature Count
By sharing the results of natural asset management efforts across Canada, we provide decision-makers with the information and incentive they need to begin working with nature to improve their community.