The Future of Biodiversity: Reconciling Nature and Economics

Poster event

Date and Time

May 7, 2026
04:30PM - 07:00PM EDT

Location

Tsai Auditorium
CGIS South, Cambridge

As part of Boston Climate Week, The Harvard University Biodiversity and Planetary Stewardship Initiative (HUBS) , anchored at the Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability invites you to a panel discussion and networking reception around the Future of Biodiversity.

Biodiversity underpins our planet’s life support systems, yet views differ on why biodiversity matters. On one end of the spectrum, nature matters because it supports the well-being of people, primarily through natural capital (the “utilitarian” perspective). On the other end of the spectrum, the diversity of nature has an intrinsic value, given its 3.9 billion years of evolutionary history, most of that in the absence of humans (the “nature for nature” perspective).

This panel will explore these contrasting perspectives and how they can be reconciled. In doing so, we examine the roles and responsibilities humans bring to the table, whether it is protecting pristine environments, enjoying wildlife, or utilizing nature for its ecosystem services.

 

This event is presented in collaboration with The Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability

 

Poster event

Alexandre Antonelli

Speaker

Executive Director of Science at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

Alexandre Antonelli

Rachel Gallery

Speaker

Thomas Lovejoy Endowed Chair and Professor of Microbial Ecology at the University of Arizona

Rachel Gallery

Stephen Polasky

Speaker

Regents Professor and Fesler-Lampert Professor of Ecological/Environmental Economics at the University of Minnesota

Stephen Polasky

Bios