Every business depends on nature and most are helping destroy it, landmark report warns

Emissions File

Improving efficiency, reducing waste and emissions, strengthening supply-chain transparency and shifting finance away from harmful activities can all reduce risk while protecting ecosystems. (File Photo)

The accelerating loss of nature has become a critical systemic risk that threatens global economic stability, financial markets and human well-being.

That’s the stark conclusion of a landmark new report published this week by the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (Ipbes).

The assessment, known as the Business and Biodiversity report — approved by representatives of more than 150 governments — reframes biodiversity loss not as a distant environmental concern, but an immediate economic threat that reaches into boardrooms, supply chains and households alike.

From food production and water security to insurance, tourism and global trade, it finds that every sector of the economy depends, directly or indirectly, on nature’s continued stability. Yet economic growth has come at a staggering ecological cost and the systems that reward profit continue to penalise protection.

Between 1820 and 2022, the global economy grew from $1.18 trillion to more than $130 trillion. Businesses played a central role in that expansion. But the failure to account for nature — and to integrate its value into economic and financial systems — has driven unprecedented biodiversity loss, with 14 out of 18 categories of nature’s contributions to people now in decline.

The consequences are not evenly shared. While wealth and material capital have grown, natural capital has shrunk. The benefits of growth have accrued to some, while the ecological costs — degraded land, polluted water and collapsing ecosystems — have fallen disproportionately on others, particularly in poorer regions and among Indigenous and local communities.

This imbalance has now reached a tipping point, Ipbes warns. The decline of biodiversity and ecosystem services is no longer a background trend but a critical systemic risk, with implications for human rights, economic resilience and long-term prosperity.

The report describes how business governance and strategy have developed in systems that largely ignore or undervalue biodiversity, creating a gap between how companies operate and what nature needs to survive.

Business decision-making is driven by short-term timelines driven by quarterly profits, annual reports and fast investment returns while ecosystems recover over much longer periods. 

Because of this mismatch, biodiversity loss is rarely factored into corporate decisions and companies struggle to justify action under traditional ideas of fiduciary duty that prioritise short-term shareholder returns. At the same time, markets do not properly price biodiversity or the services nature provides, such as clean water, climate regulation and pollination. 

Companies therefore face little financial penalty for harming nature and gain few rewards for protecting it, leaving weak incentives to conserve, restore or sustainably use biodiversity.

Business-as-usual still dominates

Despite mounting evidence, the report finds that the conditions in which businesses operate continue to reward behaviour that drives nature’s decline.

Large subsidies still flow to activities that degrade biodiversity, often with the support of industry lobbying. In 2023, global public and private finance flows with directly negative impacts on nature were estimated at $7.3 trillion. Of that, private finance accounted for $4.9 trillion, while environmentally harmful public subsidies made up about $2.4 trillion.

By contrast, just $220 billion — roughly 3% of that amount — was directed towards conservation and restoration.

“The loss of biodiversity is among the most serious threats to business,” said professor Stephen Polasky, a co-chair of the assessment. “Yet the twisted reality is that it often seems more profitable to degrade biodiversity than to protect it.”

Short-term incentives, weak enforcement and voluntary reporting regimes have allowed ecological damage to remain largely invisible on balance sheets. While individual projects may appear profitable, their cumulative impacts can push ecosystems past irreversible thresholds – with cascading economic consequences.

Blind spot in boardrooms

One of the report’s most striking findings is how poorly biodiversity is understood and managed within the corporate world.

Less than 1% of publicly reporting companies mention their impacts on biodiversity. Among financial institutions representing about 30% of global market capitalisation, the most commonly cited barriers to assessing nature-related risk are a lack of reliable data, models and scenarios.

Too often, the report notes, businesses spend more time navigating competing frameworks for disclosure than taking meaningful action. Scientific research, meanwhile, is rarely written with business decision-makers in mind, further widening the gap between knowledge and practice.

“This report cuts through that confusion,” said Matt Jones, another co-chair of the assessment. “It brings together years of research and practice into a single integrated framework that shows both the risks of nature loss to business and the opportunities for business to help reverse this.”

Measuring what matters

The report emphasises that while no single method can capture all business impacts and dependencies on nature, useful tools already exist.

It proposes three core principles for assessing biodiversity-related methods: coverage, accuracy and responsiveness. 

What needs to be measured depends on the context — whether a decision is being made at a single site, across a supply chain or at a portfolio level. Local, site-specific decisions require bottom-up approaches, including on-the-ground observations and participatory monitoring. 

Corporate and financial decisions can rely on broader, top-down models that assess risk across regions and sectors.

Indigenous lands, knowledge and exclusion

The report, too, highlights how industrial development now threatens 60% of indigenous lands globally and a quarter of all indigenous territories are under high pressure from resource extraction.

Yet indigenous peoples and local communities, who are often the most effective stewards of biodiversity, remain underrepresented in business research and decision-making.

“Data and knowledge are siloed,” said professor Ximena Rueda, a co-chair of the assessment. “There is limited recognition of indigenous peoples and local communities as holders of knowledge on conservation, restoration and sustainable use.”

Respectful collaboration, the report argues, is not only an ethical imperative but a practical one. Better integration of scientific and Indigenous knowledge can improve risk management, reduce conflict and unlock long-term value.

What businesses can do better

While the scale of the crisis is daunting, the assessment stresses that many actions that benefit biodiversity also make business sense.

Improving efficiency, reducing waste and emissions, strengthening supply-chain transparency and shifting finance away from harmful activities can all reduce risk while protecting ecosystems. Financial institutions, in particular, have the power to redirect capital at scale.

Crucially, the report warns against greenwashing. Transparent strategies, credible metrics and public disclosure of both impacts and lobbying activities are essential if business action is to translate into real biodiversity outcomes.

“Better engagement with nature is not optional for business — it is a necessity,” said Rueda. “It is vital for their bottom line and long-term prosperity.”

Ipbes is clear that businesses cannot deliver transformative change on their own. Governments, financial actors and civil society must work together to reshape the conditions under which markets operate.

The report identifies five pillars of an enabling environment: policy and regulation, economic and financial systems, social norms and culture, technology and data and capacity and knowledge. Across these areas, it sets out more than 100 concrete actions that could align economic activity with ecological reality.

“We need to move beyond the false choice between being pro-business or pro-environment,” Polasky said. “All business depends on nature. Protecting it is not a constraint on prosperity – it is a prerequisite.”

Read More

Latest

Will Bitcoin Boom in 2026? Keeping Cryptocurrency Players Informed

By NFTevening March 6, 2026 Bitcoin has served to define the cryptocurrency community since its initial launch in 2009. While representing nothing more than an interesting investment opportunity at one time, this stablecoin has since become extremely popular throughout the online gaming community as an alternative payment method. However, even Bitcoin is not immune to

At climate summit, African leaders call for a bigger role in energy transition

African leaders called for regional cooperation and more climate investments, as the second Africa Climate Summit opened this Monday in Addis Ababa. Heads of state urged the continent to play a bigger role in the transition to a cleaner global economy. Speaking at the opening event, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said it's time to

USA Cruise, Morocco Take Control, Brazil Advance On World Cup Day 9

```html id="s7wthc" ``` By Newspot Nigeria Sports Desk Day Nine of the 2026 FIFA World Cup brought four more group-stage matches and a clear theme across the schedule: teams that needed control went out and took it. The United States defeated Australia 2-0 to book a place in the next round, Morocco edged Scotland to

Cancer: Nigeria empowers patients with N50m lifetime

….As 200 beneficiaries get N100.000 each  AKOR SYLVESTER, Abuja The federal government has unveiled a N50 million Social Determinants of Health (SDoH) Fund to support cancer patients to enable them to meet the challenges of transportation, accommodation, feeding and other non-medical issues. The Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, Iziaq Adekunle Salako, who

Newsletter

Don't miss

Will Bitcoin Boom in 2026? Keeping Cryptocurrency Players Informed

By NFTevening March 6, 2026 Bitcoin has served to define the cryptocurrency community since its initial launch in 2009. While representing nothing more than an interesting investment opportunity at one time, this stablecoin has since become extremely popular throughout the online gaming community as an alternative payment method. However, even Bitcoin is not immune to

At climate summit, African leaders call for a bigger role in energy transition

African leaders called for regional cooperation and more climate investments, as the second Africa Climate Summit opened this Monday in Addis Ababa. Heads of state urged the continent to play a bigger role in the transition to a cleaner global economy. Speaking at the opening event, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said it's time to

USA Cruise, Morocco Take Control, Brazil Advance On World Cup Day 9

```html id="s7wthc" ``` By Newspot Nigeria Sports Desk Day Nine of the 2026 FIFA World Cup brought four more group-stage matches and a clear theme across the schedule: teams that needed control went out and took it. The United States defeated Australia 2-0 to book a place in the next round, Morocco edged Scotland to

Cancer: Nigeria empowers patients with N50m lifetime

….As 200 beneficiaries get N100.000 each  AKOR SYLVESTER, Abuja The federal government has unveiled a N50 million Social Determinants of Health (SDoH) Fund to support cancer patients to enable them to meet the challenges of transportation, accommodation, feeding and other non-medical issues. The Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare, Iziaq Adekunle Salako, who

A befitting garland for UBA GMD, Alawuba @ 60

THOMAS IMONIKHE 08051000465 There is no iota of doubt that the Group Managing Director (GMD) of United Bank for Africa Plc and Chairman Body of Banks’ CEOs, Oliver Chukwudum Alawuba, an astute banker and one of Nigeria’s top corporate business leaders, who clocks three scores Saturday June 20, has made tremendous impact in the nation’s

Business seminar in Munich highlights Hong Kong’s strategic roles amidst global shifts (with photos)

Business seminar in Munich highlights Hong Kong's strategic roles amidst global shifts (with photos) ******************************************************************************************      The Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office, Berlin (HKETO Berlin), promoted Hong Kong's unique advantages and strategic roles at the seminar "Hong Kong's strategic role amidst geopolitical tensions" on June 18 (Munich time) in Munich, Germany.             Senior executives, investors

AI for business services: From job fears to productivity

AI for business services: From job fears to productivity

Business Insurance-AZ Achieves Record Response Times for 2026 Arizona Construction Bids

Business Insurance-AZ achieves milestone response speeds for commercial construction bids across Arizona, accelerating documentation delivery to keep local projects moving forward without delay. Phoenix, AZ, June 06-2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Business Insurance-AZ has achieved record-breaking processing speeds and response times for commercial construction bids throughout Arizona, directly supporting the state’s massive infrastructure and advanced manufacturing boom