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Protect nature or risk extinction for companies

A landmark report urged companies to take action now, or risk being wiped out.

The Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services assessment, which took three years to complete and was signed by more than 150 countries, will guide policymaking in multiple sectors.

The report, written by 79 experts from around the world, identifies "inadequate" or "perverse" incentives, weak institutions and enforcement, as well as "significant" data gaps, among other obstacles to progress.

The plan builds on the 2024 pledge made by countries to protect 30 percent of land and ocean by 2030. Last year, they announced a plan to invest $200 billion in the effort. This is still far below the amount of money that goes into damaging activities.

'BLIND SPOT'

The authors, citing data from 2023, said that despite the need for a "transformative" change, $7.3 trillion of public and private funds were going to activities that harm the environment.

The report, which is based on thousands of sources and years of research, brings together the findings of many different studies and practices into one integrated framework. It shows the business risks associated with nature loss, as well as the business opportunities to reverse the trend, said Matt Jones, UK, who was one of the three co-chairs.

"Businesses and other key players can either lead the path towards a sustainable global economy, or risk extinction... not only of species but also their own."

The report stated that companies can take action now by setting ambitious goals and embedding them into corporate strategy, strengthening auditing and monitoring, and performance assessment, and innovating products, processes, and services.

It added that less than 1% of public companies disclosed biodiversity impacts.

Research firm Zero Carbon Analytics says that construction, food, pharmaceuticals, and infrastructure are among the most vulnerable sectors to biodiversity loss. However, most companies are exposed through their supply chains.

Paul Polman said that business strategy is about managing risks and building resilience. However, nature has "barely featured" in this equation.

The IPBES report shows that the blind spot has now become one of the most significant economic risks in our time. Mark Potter edited the article.

(source: Reuters)