Origins Compensatory mitigation was developed in the United States with the aim of balancing the demand for economic development with the need to conserve wetlands. This began with the
Clean Water Act (CWA) in 1972. Under Section 404 of the CWA, a permit from the
US Army Corps of Engineers is required to conduct certain activities that may impact wetlands. The developer must submit a
Public Notice to their respective district of the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) requesting to carry out a project and associated ecological impacts on a wetland. Mitigation banking was developed in the United States in the 1980s as a new method for compensatory mitigation with a market-oriented, off-site approach. Guidance from the
US Fish and Wildlife Service in 1983 led to the establishment of the first wetland mitigation banks in the early 1980s. The practice began as a way for state highway and public works departments to comply with regulations for wetland mitigation, and later entrepreneurial banks were set up to sell credits to public and private developers. For example, the Fina La Terre in Louisiana, signed off in 1984 and proposed by a private company, was one of the first mitigation banks in the country. The Corps initially preferred on-site mitigation to preserve the wetland functions at their location. Unfortunately, this approach had a low long-term success rate. The application of mitigation banking has been expanded beyond wetlands to include
streams and other aquatic habitats. This led to the creation of the first stream mitigation bank in
Fox Creek, Missouri in 2000. The concept has also been expanded to develop other forms of biodiversity banking, including
conservation banking for endangered species in California and habitat banking in other countries. By 2000, there were over 230 private mitigation banks and 180 state-run mitigation banks. By 2001, 23 states had statutes or regulations authorising the use of mitigation banks and a further 8 had issued guidelines to govern mitigation banking. In 2008, the regulations for compensatory mitigation (which includes mitigation banking) were revised by the
USACE and
USEPA under the 'Compensatory Mitigation Rule'. These new federal regulations established mitigation banks as the preferred method for compensatory mitigation and also introduced
ecosystem services into the standards for mitigation banking. By 2024, more than 1200 mitigation banks had been approved and were operating in the United States with a total of 750,000 credits approved across the country. However, state and regional studies on wetland compensatory mitigation suggest that a significant portion of compensation sites are failing to meet administrative and ecological performance standards, according to the Environmental Law Institute. == Conservation easements ==