Berliner Boersenzeitung - At COP15, businesses urged to act for nature

EUR -
AED 3.850499
AFN 71.008773
ALL 98.203623
AMD 408.181205
ANG 1.878426
AOA 957.117815
ARS 1052.802845
AUD 1.611799
AWG 1.889601
AZN 1.78073
BAM 1.95685
BBD 2.104369
BDT 124.546819
BGN 1.955321
BHD 0.395093
BIF 3078.681071
BMD 1.048322
BND 1.404767
BOB 7.242022
BRL 6.068274
BSD 1.042269
BTN 88.462435
BWP 14.238911
BYN 3.410895
BYR 20547.119472
BZD 2.100867
CAD 1.464763
CDF 3009.733788
CHF 0.933259
CLF 0.036948
CLP 1019.505987
CNY 7.59717
CNH 7.598032
COP 4601.873352
CRC 530.889885
CUC 1.048322
CUP 27.780544
CVE 110.939365
CZK 25.31071
DJF 185.603117
DKK 7.458186
DOP 62.814299
DZD 140.452152
EGP 52.010209
ERN 15.724836
ETB 127.59287
FJD 2.383151
FKP 0.827459
GBP 0.834234
GEL 2.872224
GGP 0.827459
GHS 16.558655
GIP 0.827459
GMD 74.431168
GNF 8983.905538
GTQ 8.090178
GYD 219.26283
HKD 8.156945
HNL 26.338382
HRK 7.477955
HTG 136.814706
HUF 410.177472
IDR 16634.465696
ILS 3.851683
IMP 0.827459
INR 88.359061
IQD 1365.358559
IRR 44108.165823
ISK 144.899116
JEP 0.827459
JMD 166.040664
JOD 0.743572
JPY 161.920737
KES 135.495088
KGS 90.983275
KHR 4196.291327
KMF 495.32971
KPW 943.489782
KRW 1470.40793
KWD 0.322684
KYD 0.868583
KZT 520.409126
LAK 22893.719185
LBP 93333.853984
LKR 303.348533
LRD 189.169904
LSL 18.807949
LTL 3.095423
LVL 0.634119
LYD 5.089828
MAD 10.54339
MDL 19.010562
MGA 4864.702709
MKD 61.551564
MMK 3404.910334
MNT 3562.199534
MOP 8.356543
MRU 41.470644
MUR 49.09263
MVR 16.206881
MWK 1807.304094
MXN 21.343897
MYR 4.667134
MZN 66.998095
NAD 18.807949
NGN 1763.687131
NIO 38.350941
NOK 11.598951
NPR 140.756858
NZD 1.793396
OMR 0.403607
PAB 1.048071
PEN 3.95212
PGK 4.196291
PHP 61.870958
PKR 289.43114
PLN 4.324697
PYG 8136.52045
QAR 3.822234
RON 4.9767
RSD 117.002216
RUB 109.041694
RWF 1422.776888
SAR 3.936062
SBD 8.788669
SCR 15.763705
SDG 630.565511
SEK 11.518181
SGD 1.412426
SHP 0.827459
SLE 23.827917
SLL 21982.801994
SOS 595.625233
SRD 37.209173
STD 21698.157582
SVC 9.120067
SYP 2633.941386
SZL 18.801446
THB 36.275119
TJS 11.161648
TMT 3.669128
TND 3.32964
TOP 2.455279
TRY 36.262506
TTD 7.078798
TWD 34.040064
TZS 2778.054341
UAH 43.118956
UGX 3872.539951
USD 1.048322
UYU 44.570933
UZS 13371.173597
VES 49.410144
VND 26648.355968
VUV 124.458945
WST 2.926487
XAF 656.315372
XAG 0.034032
XAU 0.00039
XCD 2.833144
XDR 0.79284
XOF 656.315372
XPF 119.331742
YER 262.001981
ZAR 18.935062
ZMK 9436.158367
ZMW 28.791996
ZWL 337.559392
  • BTI

    0.2200

    37.6

    +0.59%

  • GSK

    0.1400

    34.1

    +0.41%

  • AZN

    0.3900

    66.02

    +0.59%

  • CMSC

    0.0320

    24.672

    +0.13%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.19

    0%

  • SCS

    0.2400

    13.51

    +1.78%

  • RIO

    0.9200

    63.27

    +1.45%

  • NGG

    0.2300

    63.34

    +0.36%

  • RELX

    -0.0200

    46.73

    -0.04%

  • BP

    -0.0800

    29.64

    -0.27%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.21

    -0.15%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    6.8

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.0150

    24.46

    +0.06%

  • BCE

    0.0700

    26.84

    +0.26%

  • BCC

    3.4550

    147.235

    +2.35%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    8.88

    +1.69%

At COP15, businesses urged to act for nature
At COP15, businesses urged to act for nature / Photo: Lars Hagberg - AFP

At COP15, businesses urged to act for nature

Widely blamed for ravaging Earth's ecosystems, big businesses are nevertheless being turned to as key players in a deal to save nature at the COP15 biodiversity conference.

Text size:

With hundreds of billions of dollars needed for the task, public funds can only fill part of the gap. Campaigners and experts at the talks are demanding companies act to reduce their impact -- and firms in turn are asking for clear rules of engagement.

Ministers at the meeting in Montreal are thrashing out a global agreement for the next decade to curb damage to Earth's forests, oceans and species -- with conservation and finance top of the agenda.

"One of the other things at stake in this COP is getting businesses involved," said Pierre Cannet of the Worldwide Fund for Nature, on the sidelines of the talks.

"Whatever the outcome of the summit, they will have to ask themselves how they can curb the fall in biodiversity."

Elizabeth Mrema, the head of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity that underpins COP15, said a record number of private-sector parties registered for this year's summit, where delegates are working on a new Global Biodiversity Framework.

"Clearly they've listened," she told AFP.

"They have understood or they are getting there now, understanding also the impact of their operations on nature, the nature biodiversity which we all depend on and (they) also depend (on) for their businesses," she added.

"If they are not part of the framework, their businesses will also suffer."

- Invest in nature -

Some $900 billion a year is needed to move from "an economy that devours nature to a neutral and then a positive economy," says Gilles Kleitz of the French state development agency AFD.

For this, "the role of businesses is fundamental," said Didier Babin, a researcher at Cirad, an institute that focuses on sustainable agriculture.

"More businesses have to be brought on board" to help fund the targets, he added. "They depend on biodiversity and they must invest more in the capital of nature. Nature needs to be thought of as an asset."

One of the targets in the framework under discussion at COP15 is a section aimed at obliging big companies and financial groups to measure and publish their impacts on the natural world and their exposure to it.

The World Economic Forum said in a 2020 report that more than half of global production depends heavily (15 percent) or moderately (37 percent) on nature and services related to it.

It calculated the value of businesses' exposure to degraded ecosystems at $44 trillion.

The report found that the construction sector was the most exposed with $4 trillion, followed by agriculture with $2.5 trillion and the food and drink industry with $1.4 trillion.

- Measuring biodiversity impact -

At COP15, a grouping of 330 businesses called Business for Nature is pushing for a uniform framework for all corporations to report their impacts and exposure.

With collective turnover of more than $1.5 trillion, they include big names such as Unilever, Ikea, Danone, BNP Paribas and Tata Steel.

"There will be no economy, there will be no business on a dead planet," said the grouping's executive director, Eva Zabey.

"And so now we need governments to adopt an ambitious global biodiversity framework that will provide the political certainty and it will require businesses to contribute."

Brune Poirson, director of sustainable development at the hotel group Accor, said COP15 "must be a key milestone" in this process.

"We need a framework with all the actors in the sector," she said.

Efforts are gaining pace to make companies disclose their contribution to the carbon emissions that drive climate change -- but relatively few companies currently declare their impact on the ecosystems that support all life.

"This summit needs to be a turning point in humanity's relationship with nature and to do so it needs to kick off fundamental changes in the way the economy works," said Eliot Whittington of the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership.

"More and more businesses and financial institutions are realizing how essential action on nature and biodiversity is, but they need governments to provide the right rules and incentives to solve market failures and make change possible."

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)