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Read time: 6 mins | Added date: 19/10/2023
Nature is in decline. Katie Leach, Head of Nature, Lloyds Banking Group and Jennifer Burrett, Director, Sustainability & ESG Finance, Lloyds Bank Corporate & Institutional, explore the importance for businesses to embed nature considerations into the work that they do and to assess their nature related risks and opportunities in their operations and in their supply chains.
Just three in every 100 UK businesses currently monitor nature risks1, yet more than half of global GDP – $58 trillion of value generation – is moderately or highly dependent on nature and its services2. In a UK context, an assessment has shown that 13 of the 18 sectors in the FTSE 100 have production processes that have high, or very high, material dependence on nature3.
Therefore we know that businesses, or indeed any of us, couldn’t operate without nature and the ecosystem services it provides, such as natural raw resources, pollination, flood prevention, water quality and disease control. However, nature is in decline.
Wildlife populations have fallen by an average of 69% since 1970 and some species have suffered declines of as much as 95%4. A quarter of our assessed plant and animal species are threatened by human actions5, a million species face extinction6 and we are cutting down 2,400 trees a minute7. The UK is one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world, ranked in the bottom 10%8.
As countries, individuals and businesses, we therefore need to act. We must not only halt the decline of nature but reverse it. Businesses need to understand how they depend on nature and how they impact on nature too.
The specific locations of businesses’ operations and supply chains are important when considering these impacts and dependencies; they differ enormously from place to place. Businesses need their nature strategies to be grounded in location-based plans.
While the outlook is concerning, nature decline presents the business world with many opportunities. These include investing in nature-based solutions (such as tree planting for flood management and seagrass meadows as coastal defences) and nature tech (for example eDNA and satellite monitoring).
Some corporates are leading the way and embedding nature into their strategy and priorities. They recognise that addressing the decline in nature is not only the right thing to do, but something they must do; it is an opportunity.
More business leaders are increasingly recognising the need to act for nature. Paul Polman, Business Leader, Campaigner and Former CEO, Unilever, interviewed as part of the Save Our Wild Isles Business films (created by RSPB, WWF and National Trust), comments that “increasingly we’re starting to understand that this is probably one of the biggest opportunities that we’re sitting on this century.
The costs that we are incurring as a result of destruction of biodiversity is significantly higher than what it would cost us to prevent the issues in the first place and that makes it such an attractive business opportunity for all of us.”
Also discussed in the Save Our Wild Isles Business films is the John Lewis Partnership nature strategy, where they highlight the importance of having science-based targets for nature. “Unless we set credible, ambitious targets that we can be judged against, we won’t make fast enough progress,” says Sharon White, the Partnership’s Chair. “So we’ve set some incredibly ambitious targets for how we as a retailer, both encourage greater biodiversity but also be really thoughtful about how we protect nature in our supply chains.”
Some companies have also begun to embed their nature strategies into sustainable finance. For example, The Hill Group has a biodiversity net gain (BNG) target in its loan facility. Its BNG performance, among other targets, will result in an adjustment to the margin depending on performance against the targets set.
Importantly, nature can also deliver positive outcomes for climate change strategies. Climate change and nature are different sides of the same coin and are intrinsically linked, meaning we can't solve one of them without the other.
As nature is destroyed, the carbon it was storing is released into the atmosphere, contributing to climate change. When nature is protected and restored, carbon is captured within the ecosystem, taking greenhouse gases directly out of the air. So, businesses must not neglect their climate strategies when designing and implementing nature strategies; the two should be addressed together. Nature opportunities can support positive climate outcomes too.
“The costs that we are incurring as a result of destruction of biodiversity is significantly higher than what it would cost us to prevent the issues in the first place and that makes it such an attractive business opportunity for all of us.”
Paul Polman, Business Leader, Campaigner and Former CEO, Unilever
The WWF, the National Trust and RSPB, alongside Silverback Film productions commissioned a series of four films to highlight the relationship between businesses and nature, exploring business impacts, the importance of financial sector action, and nature relationships in the food, farming and marine sectors.
Businesses must incorporate nature into their business plans and climate strategies and set science-based targets for nature.
“It’s fantastic that Lloyds Bank Corporate & Institutional are taking the nature crisis seriously. We know the financial sector has a fundamental role to play in addressing biodiversity loss, through all areas of business, whether it’s by setting nature-positive criteria for financial decisions, or directly funding nature restoration.”
Beccy Speight, Chief Executive of the RSPB.
Beccy continues: “The direction has been set, and we now need to see this translated into action, both at Lloyds Bank and in the wider financial sector. With the release of Science Based Targets for Nature (SBTN) and the framework from the Taskforce for Nature-related Financial Disclosure (TNFD) this year, it will become easier for businesses and financial institutions to take action and continue to build the momentum to reduce risk and maximise opportunity in the face of the dual nature and climate crises.”
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