🌱 This week in NatureTech #12

[4-minute read]

Happy Tuesday! And welcome to our 72 new readers who joined last week.

For those who didn’t see… last week we dropped our latest deep dive ‘What are 9 top investors excited about in NatureTech’. Check it out below.

In today’s edition:

🌊 Biodiversity standards?

🌳 A new cohort of biodiversity start-ups

💼 A whole new suite of NatureTech jobs

Thanks for reading! 

📩Submit deals, jobs and announcements for the newsletter at [email protected]

🐘Long Read (1-Min Read)

GRI and TNFD make reporting on biodiversity easier

Driving the news: Two leading standards setters for biodiversity reporting have issued joint guidance. The guidance shows how companies can report against both standards with minimal extra effort! This is welcome news in a complex nature reporting landscape.

Who?

  1. The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI).  A broad sustainability reporting framework. It has some areas focussed on helping companies disclose their impacts on biodiversity.

  2. The Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD). Focussed on helping companies disclose impacts on biodiversity. They also require companies to incorporate nature risks, and opportunities, into their business strategies

Why is it necessary?

  • The alphabet soup: There are a growing number of reporting frameworks and standards. Taken together these acronyms lead to an overwhelming ‘alphabet soup’. For example, SASB, GRI, TCFD, TNFD, CDP, CDSB, IIRC to name a few.

  • Sustainability team overwhelm: For sustainability professionals reporting against many standards increases complexity and time. It also distracts from sustainability initiatives.

  • Case in point: Research from Nature Metrics suggests four in five companies are unprepared for reporting under TNFD

What does the guidance say?

  • The guidance acts like a big map to show where the standards are similar. Think … 80’s US crime drama where suspects are connected with red bits of string.

  • It shows that companies following either standard, can report against both with minimal extra effort. Good news for biodiversity reporting as GRI has a whopping 14,000 companies.

Why it matters for businesses. This should lead to simplified compliance. It should also ensure companies can produce consistent and high-quality nature-related reports. 

Why it matters for Nature. The theory goes… more alignment = reduced complexity for corporate sustainability teams = more adoption  = more businesses considering how they interact with Nature.  

Why it matters for NatureTech. A boost for Measurement, Reporting and Verification startups that help corporates to report against TNFD. For example, Nala Earth, Kuyua, Leeana, NatCap and NatureMetrics

💬Snippets for your lift conversations

  • Big business:  Consumer goods giants including Nestle, Mars Wrigley and Ferrero have backed the European Union's upcoming ban on imported goods linked to deforestation, amid calls from some companies to delay it.

  • Big business: Discount retailer Lidl has committed to investing £300m annually in the British beef sector for the next five years to support adoption of regenerative farming practices, grassland management and reducing carbon

  • Finance: The Australian government has issued a call for partners to help develop biodiversity credit project under the Nature Repair Market (NRM), with $2 mln available in funding 

  • Finance: The Central Bank of Netherland highlights the significant exposure of financial institutions to companies with high or very high dependency on ecosystem services. Dutch financial institutions report having 36% of their total assets, or EUR 510 billion in investments, exposed to the risk of biodiversity loss 

  • Finance: The ESG labelled bonds market saw a noticeable deceleration in 2Q24, with possible reasons being increased regulatory or reporting fatigue. However, SustainableFitch believe the EU’s Nature Restoration Law could boost issuance in H224

  • Nature-For-Sale: Watchdog identifies endangered forest land in two Malaysian states listed for online sale

  • Policy: Time to get to know your supply chain - the  EU adopted its Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive this week. It gives companies a set of obligations to manage impacts of their activities on human rights and environmental matters

  • Policy:The latest World Trade Organisation (WTO) talks failed to break a deadlock on reform aimed at strengthening rules on harmful fisheries subsidies, with the EU and the US blaming India for thwarting the deal.

  • Policy: Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center (SEAFDEC) and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) officially launched a five-year partnership to safeguard  marine biodiversity and fisheries resources in the Indo-Pacific region.

  • Research: Goals to stop the decline of nature and clean up the air and water in England are slipping out of reach, a new report has warned

  • Research:  Australia could mend much of its degraded landscapes by directing just 0.3% of GDP to restoration. This could be done in a way that increases agricultural productivity on prime farmland, supports jobs and businesses in regional areas a new study has found.

🎣Deals

  • No deal this week but…Silverstrand Capital announced its latest cohort of eight companies it will put through its biodiversity accelerator

💭Little Bytes

📊Stat: Not only does the Amazon encompass the single largest remaining tropical rainforest in the world, it also houses at least 10% of the world's known biodiversity

📺️Watch: Roots and refuge: the year’s best mangrove images – in pictures

💬 Listen: How do fish know where a sound comes from? Scientists have an answer

💼Jobs

🐝 Corporate 🐝

🐝Finance🐝

🦊 Nature-based solution projects & nature tech startups 🦊

📩 Feel free to send us deals, announcements, or anything else at [email protected] . Have a great week ahead! 

Written by Ollie & Wasim. Drop us a message!

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