The Biodiversity Consultancy strategically operates across industries, driving impactful initiatives for positive change while prioritising responsible stewardship of biodiversity.
Through close collaboration with our partners across their business lifecycle, we enable nature to be integrated into operational strategies.
We highly value the work of our researchers and our collaborations with academics and partners. Explore further details about our work here.
We are the catalyst for nature positive business
The decline of primate populations—especially those featured in the Primates in Peril: 2023–2025 report—has significant implications for biodiversity and the resilience of nature-dependent supply chains. Read this article to discover how businesses can support primate conservation to secure and advance their commercial interests.
Learn about the latest CSRD and CSDDD changes, their impact on business compliance, and how to turn regulatory shifts into opportunities. Get actionable steps for aligning with new sustainability reporting and due diligence requirements.
What is the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) and what does it mean for business disclosure and reporting? The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) is a voluntary global framework for Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) reporting. GRI enables companies to demonstrate transparency about their impacts—both positive and negative—while serving as a benchmark for the organisation’s sustainable development. By providing a global standard, it fosters informed dialogue and decision-making, including on biodiversity.
The Consolidated Mining Standard Initiative (CMSI) aim to harmonise nature frameworks like TNFD, SBTN, and CSRD to reduce confusion and improve biodiversity action. Our consultants can help you interpret your business needs and apply the relevant framework to your organisation.
The global renewable energy transition is gathering pace. In offshore wind, annual additions are expected to triple by 2028 from 2023 levels, in line with the climate COP28 Global Renewables and Energy Efficiency pledge. This expansion must also align with the Global Biodiversity Framework goal to halt and reverse biodiversity loss by 2030. As development proliferates, there is a clear need for timely and coordinated spatial planning that balances climate goals with the need to minimise impacts on people and biodiversity.
Due to the acceleration of the renewable energy transition globally, the demand for aluminium has been growing rapidly, contributing to increased bauxite mining. This could potentially put biodiversity across the sector's value chain at risk, especially at a time when global biodiversity is in decline. Biodiversity frameworks become critical in maintaining sustainability efforts and ensuring responsible supply chain management.
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The increased frequency of whale strandings along the U.S. East Coast since 2016 has attracted a noteworthy amount of public interest.
Environmental DNA (eDNA) as a tool for biodiversity surveys is a relatively new, but rapidly developing field. In this briefing note we look at the current state of eDNA approaches.
All three species of orangutan are listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List. This Industry Briefing Note outlines essential good practice for considering orangutans on your project, especially when alignment with PS6 is required.
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The Biodiversity Consultancy is now a Delivery Partner of the Accountability Framework initiative (AFi), helping companies apply the Framework to achieve responsible, deforestation- and conversion-free supply chains.
Research with University of Oxford study has determined that the widely used tools available to businesses for assessing their biodiversity impacts depend on broad assumptions and can have large uncertainties that are poorly understood or communicated. If used appropriately, they can be powerful tools to help guide effective action to address biodiversity loss – but if not, they can lead to misguided effort and can be insufficient for robust biodiversity strategy design.
Many corporate leaders have said, “Our company wants to invest in nature recovery, but we don’t know where to start.”
To address this challenge, The Biodiversity Consultancy and the University of Oxford have come together for a joint research initiative. This work aims to provide companies with a clear framework, helping them navigate investment decisions that contribute to global nature positive goals.
Collaborative research highlights gaps and opportunities in corporate biodiversity commitments.