The blue and water economy is integral to core economic decisions. Marine transport routes shape global trade flows. Aquaculture and fisheries influence food supply and pricing dynamics. Water-intensive industries affect production costs, energy strategies and inflation pressures. These dynamics influence output, trade balances and fiscal stability. As their economic footprint widens, marine and water-linked activities move from environmental classification to economic assessment. They affect cash flows, gearing and credit spreads. As these channels affect valuations and fiscal sustainability, marine-linked assets enter mainstream pricing and asset allocation frameworks, where they are assessed through volatility, correlation patterns and factor exposures. In parallel, governments adjust fiscal instruments, technological spending and regulatory frameworks to strengthen the contribution of the marine and water sectors to national growth. Whether these adjustments generate productivity gains or reallocate costs depends on institutional discipline and incentive design. The evolving architecture of the blue and water economy is defined by how capital markets, policy choices and innovation capacity translate natural endowments into sustained economic performance. This integration is reflected in the multi-year return patterns of leading water-themed ETFs presented in Figure 1. Over a three-year horizon, annualized returns 1 for major vehicles such as CGW, TBLU, PHO, FIW and PIO range from approximately 12% to 15%, indicating integration into broader equity market cycles. Across five years, returns cluster between roughly 7% and 9%, placing water exposure within the range expected of diversified equity allocations. The narrower dispersion over longer horizons indicates that performance differences compress over time, supporting the view that water-themed ETFs operate within conventional equity return parameters. At the macro level, dedicated funding mechanisms such as the European Maritime, Fisheries and Aquaculture Fund allocate multi-billion euro budgets to innovation and sustainability in marine sectors, embedding blue development within fiscal planning. The broader ocean economy generated approximately US2. 2tn in exports in 2023, with services accounting for the majority of that activity and expanding faster than global GDP over recent decades. The blue and water economy operates at a material scale within fiscal systems and international trade. The expansion of market instruments, fiscal commitments and trade volumes reflects more than sectoral growth. It alters how marine and water assets are financed, regulated and assessed. Capital is channeled through equity and debt markets rather than through isolated development programs, exposing marine sectors to valuation discipline and cost-of-capital pressures. Public spending is increasingly tied to innovation benchmarks and measurable productivity targets rather than to compliance alone. Trade performance depends not only on resource endowment but also on regulatory standards, technological capability and carbon positioning. Economic transformation in this setting requires that marine and water resources be assessed through profitability, competitiveness and risk metrics. The durability of this architecture depends on the alignment of pricing signals, fiscal incentives and governance capacity. In practice, such coherence is often absent, introducing notable structural constraints. The absence of coherence is most visible in the pricing of risk. Financial valuation assumes that relevant exposures are observable and measurable. In the marine and water sectors, this assumption is often weak. Physical exposure to climate volatility, biodiversity loss and regulatory tightening is unevenly disclosed. When disclosure is incomplete, modeling becomes imprecise. Earnings projections rarely incorporate ecosystem degradation in a forward-looking manner. Consequently, valuations rely heavily on historical performance. Credit spreads reflect realized volatility more readily than prospective environmental constraints. Where marine trade or coastal infrastructure contributes materially to national income, sovereign balance sheets carry comparable exposure. Risk accumulates within operational systems before it is recognized in financial statements. The adjustment from ecological stress to asset repricing is typically gradual. Figure 2 traces this transmission pathway and identifies where pricing gaps can emerge. Beyond pricing distortions, capital allocation introduces a second constraint. Marine infrastructure and water systems require substantial upfront investment and extended development horizons. Their returns depend on regulatory continuity, trade stability and technological adaptation. Capital markets discount distant cash flows and reward liquidity, particularly when earnings visibility is limited or policy signals fluctuate. Required returns increase under such conditions, raising risk premia and narrowing project feasibility. Smaller coastal enterprises face additional barriers, as limited collateral and revenue volatility restrict access to credit. Public institutions respond through guarantees, concessional lending and blended finance structures, though these instruments differ in scale and effectiveness. The pace and scale of marine investment depend not only on accurate risk pricing but also on the mobilization of long-horizon capital at a sustainable cost. Such mobilization is also a function of institutional quality. Financing improves when regulatory frameworks are predictable and aligned across authorities. In the marine and water sectors, responsibility is frequently divided among transport, fisheries, environmental and energy bodies. Overlapping mandates produce inconsistent taxation, uneven enforcement and shifting subsidy regimes. When fiscal rules or carbon standards change without credible transition paths, revenue visibility declines and financing conditions tighten. The effectiveness of technological expenditure and green taxation rests on disciplined implementation and policy continuity. Strong governance increases the likelihood that innovation spending yields productivity gains and enhances export competitiveness. Weak coordination restricts capital formation and contributes to divergent growth outcomes. Institutional capacity thus influences both investment feasibility and the broader direction of blue economic development. Differences in institutional depth translate into uneven development patterns across economies. Advanced coastal states typically operate within deeper financial markets, broader fiscal space and more established innovation systems. These features support the scaling of marine infrastructure and the absorption of technological investment. Emerging and resource-dependent economies often face tighter budget constraints and greater exposure to climate and trade volatility. In such contexts, similar policy instruments produce different outcomes. Green taxation may encourage structural upgrading where industrial capacity is diversified, yet yield limited adjustment where productive bases are narrow. Technological expenditure strengthens competitiveness when complementary capabilities are present, but generates modest gains where absorptive capacity is weak. The trajectory of the blue and water economy is therefore conditioned by development stage, macroeconomic resilience and exposure to external shocks. Pricing gaps, capital constraints and institutional variation define the structural environment within which the blue and water economy evolves. Market integration alone does not guarantee efficient capital deployment. Investment decisions reflect the interaction between risk assessment, financing structure and policy credibility. Where these elements align, marine sectors contribute to productivity growth and trade competitiveness. Where misalignment persists, investment remains cautious and adjustment is delayed. Understanding these frictions is essential to interpreting the empirical patterns observed across markets and economies, as summarized in Figure 3. The contributions in this special issue are organized around four themes. These include asset behavior in financial markets, the effectiveness of fiscal and technological policy instruments, the dynamics of investment and growth across development stages and the structure of research and funding systems that shape strategic direction. Each theme captures a dimension central to the economic maturation of the blue and water economy. Financial market evidence reflects how blue economy exposures are priced and integrated within existing capital allocation frameworks. Water-themed equities and ETFs display identifiable risk structures and horizon-dependent correlation dynamics that align them with established equity markets. Tudor et al. (2026) show that portfolios linked to water and clean-energy activities load on systematic factors consistent with conventional asset-pricing models. Their performance can be interpreted within established factor structures. Antar (2026) examines water-themed ETFs across multiple time scales and shows that their co-movement with broader markets varies with the investment horizon. This evidence clarifies the relationship between blue economy instruments and broader equity markets and their role within diversified portfolios. Fiscal policy and technological investment influence how environmental objectives translate into economic performance within marine sectors. Umar et al. (2026) find that green technological innovation and environmental taxation contribute positively to ocean prosperity across advanced economies. Safi (2026) reports similar dynamics in China’s coastal provinces, where environmental and technological expenditure intensities influence the pace of sustainable blue economy development. Afzal et al. (2026) extend the analysis to ASEAN economies and show that blue economic resources carry measurable potential for carbon management within marine-dependent economic systems. These studies highlight how fiscal instruments, technological investment and environmental management mechanisms shape the development trajectory of the blue economy. Growth outcomes ultimately determine whether policy support and technological investment translate into sustained expansion of the blue economy. Rafiq et al. (2026) demonstrate that investment in blue economy industries generates long-run growth effects across Southeast Asian economies, indicating that sustained capital formation supports economic expansion in marine activities. Imran et al. (2026) report similar dynamics across the NEXT-11 countries, where blue economy development contributes to economic growth by strengthening productive capacity in marine-related industries. These findings indicate that the growth contribution of marine resources depends on the scale of investment and the ability of economies to translate those investments into sustained industrial expansion. The expansion of blue economy activities also depends on how research agendas and funding priorities shape the development of knowledge and technology in marine sectors. Patterns of scientific output reveal where analytical attention and technical expertise concentrate across the global research landscape. Horobet et al. (2026) document the rapid growth of blue economy scholarship and show that research activity clusters around sustainability, marine governance and resource management themes within established international collaboration networks. Sardianos et al. (2026) examine how funding allocation influences these patterns and demonstrate that financial support plays a decisive role in directing research toward data-driven analysis and technological applications within the blue economy domain. The contributions in this special issue provide a multidimensional perspective on the evolving economics of the blue and water economy. They show how marine resources are increasingly embedded within broader economic and financial systems. The timing of this special issue is particularly relevant as governments, investors and international institutions seek to align sustainability goals with economic development strategies. The following section discusses the practical and policy implications of these findings. The studies presented here offer several implications for investors, policymakers and institutions engaged in the development of the blue and water economy. At its core, the evidence clarifies how blue economy assets are priced in financial markets, how policy instruments influence marine sectors and how investment translates into long-term economic expansion. For investors, blue economy assets should be approached as identifiable sector exposures rather than thematic sustainability allocations. Water infrastructure, marine logistics, coastal utilities and related industrial segments increasingly reflect structural demand tied to trade flows, water security and environmental regulation. Portfolio managers should evaluate these exposures within conventional sector and factor allocation frameworks while accounting for horizon-dependent correlation dynamics observed in water-linked equities and ETFs. Strategic positioning in these assets requires close monitoring of regulatory developments, infrastructure investment cycles and environmental policy shifts that directly affect valuation and capital flows. For policymakers, the findings highlight the importance of policy stability and institutional coordination in shaping investment outcomes in the marine and water sectors. Large-scale projects in coastal infrastructure, marine energy, fisheries modernization and water management require long development horizons and predictable regulatory environments. Governments seeking to expand blue economy activity should align fiscal incentives, environmental regulation and industrial policy across ministries responsible for transport, fisheries, energy and environmental governance. Policy fragmentation increases financing costs and delays private investment. Coordinated policy frameworks reduce uncertainty, strengthen investor confidence and accelerate capital deployment into marine infrastructure and water systems. Figure 4 summarizes the interaction between financial markets, policy frameworks, investment systems and knowledge infrastructure that shapes blue economy development. The interaction between financial markets and policy frameworks ultimately matters only if capital is deployed into productive marine assets. Governments and development institutions should prioritize investment in coastal infrastructure, marine logistics, water systems and sustainable fisheries where economic spillovers are significant. Long-horizon financing structures, including development bank lending, blended finance and infrastructure funds, can help mobilize private capital for projects that involve high upfront costs and extended payback periods. Investment strategies that link marine resources to trade networks, energy systems and water security are more likely to generate durable economic returns. Investment decisions also depend on the availability of reliable scientific data and technological capability. Strengthening research networks, marine data systems and innovation platforms improves the ability of investors and policymakers to assess resource potential, environmental risks and long-term economic value. Coordinated research funding and international collaboration can accelerate technological progress in areas such as marine energy, coastal resilience and water management. As financial markets, policy frameworks, investment systems and knowledge infrastructure become more closely aligned, the blue economy is increasingly positioned to evolve into a broader financial ecosystem. The following section considers how such an ecosystem may emerge. The next phase of blue economy development will depend on the emergence of a more integrated financial ecosystem. Capital markets, public policy, infrastructure investment and scientific knowledge systems jointly determine how marine resources translate into economic activity. Financial instruments such as infrastructure funds, thematic equity portfolios and emerging blue bond markets provide channels through which capital can be directed toward marine sectors, while regulatory frameworks shape the stability and scale of these financing flows. Aligning financial markets with policy priorities and technological capability can accelerate the transition from sectoral marine activities to a broader ocean-based economic system. The trajectory of the blue and water economy will increasingly depend on how effectively institutions integrate sustainability objectives with long-term economic planning. Expanding ocean finance, strengthening marine data infrastructure and improving coordination between research institutions, governments and capital markets can enhance the efficiency of investment and resource management. As environmental pressures intensify and global trade structures evolve, marine resources are likely to assume a more prominent role in economic resilience, food security and energy transition pathways. The future of the blue economy will ultimately be determined not by the scale of marine resources, but by how effectively economic systems mobilize capital, policy and knowledge to sustain them.
Hasnaoui et al. (Mon,) studied this question.