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The Corporate Ecosystem Services Review - Guidelines for Identifying Business Risks and Opportunities Arising from Ecosystem Change
Ecosystems provide businesses with numerous
benefits or "ecosystem services." Forests supply
timber and wood fiber, purify water, regulate
climate, and yield genetic resources. River systems
provide freshwater, power, and recreation.
Coastal wetlands filter waste, mitigate floods, and serve as
nurseries for commercial fisheries.
However, human activities are rapidly degrading these
and other ecosystems. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment - the largest audit ever conducted of the condition and
trends in the world's ecosystems - found that ecosystems
have declined more rapidly and extensively over the past 50
years than at any other comparable time in human history.
In
fact, 15 of the 24 ecosystem services evaluated have degraded
over the past half century. The Assessment projected further
declines over coming decades, particularly in light of population
growth, economic expansion, and global climate change.
Left unchecked, this degradation could jeopardize future
economic well-being, creating new winners and losers within
the business community.
Ecosystem degradation is highly relevant to business because
companies not only impact ecosystems and the services
they provide but also depend on them. Ecosystem degradation,
therefore, can pose a number of risks to corporate performance
as well as create new business opportunities.
Types of
risks and opportunities include:
Operational
- Risks such as higher costs for freshwater due to scarcity,
lower output for hydroelectric facilities due to
siltation, or disruptions to coastal businesses due to
flooding
- Opportunities such as increasing water-use efficiency
or building an on-site wetland to circumvent the need
for new water treatment infrastructure
Regulatory and legal
- Risks such as new fines, new user fees, government
regulations, or lawsuits by local communities that lose
ecosystem services due to corporate activities
- Opportunities such as engaging governments to
develop policies and incentives to protect or restore
ecosystems that provide services a company needs
Reputational
- Risks such as retail companies being targeted by
nongovernmental organization campaigns for purchasing
wood or paper from sensitive forests or banks
facing similar protests due to investments that degrade
pristine ecosystems
- Opportunities such as implementing and communicating
sustainable purchasing, operating, or investment
practices in order to differentiate corporate brands
Market and product
- Risks such as customers switching to other suppliers
that offer products with lower ecosystem impacts
or governments implementing new sustainable
procurement policies
- Opportunities such as launching new products and
services that reduce customer impacts on ecosystems,
participating in emerging markets for carbon sequestration
and watershed protection, capturing new
revenue streams from company-owned natural assets,
and offering eco-labeled wood, seafood, produce, and
other products
Financing
- Risks such as banks implementing more rigorous lending
requirements for corporate loans
- Opportunities such as banks offering more favorable
loan terms or investors taking positions in companies
supplying products and services that improve resourceuse
efficiency or restore degraded ecosystems.
Unfortunately, companies often fail to make the connection
between the health of ecosystems and the business
bottom line. Many companies are not fully aware of the
extent of their dependence and impact on ecosystems and the
possible ramifications.
Likewise, environmental management
systems and environmental due diligence tools are often
not fully attuned to the risks and opportunities arising from
the degradation and use of ecosystem services. For instance,
many tools are more suited to handle "traditional" issues of
pollution and natural resource consumption. Most focus
on environmental impacts, not dependence. Furthermore,
they typically focus on risks, not business opportunities.
As
a result, companies may be caught unprepared or miss new
sources of revenue associated with ecosystem change.
The Corporate Ecosystem Services Review (ESR) ( 4.5 MB) is
designed to address these gaps. It consists of a structured
methodology that helps managers proactively develop strategies
to manage business risks and opportunities arising from
their company’s dependence and impact on ecosystems.
It is
a tool for strategy development, not just for environmental
assessment. Businesses can either conduct an Ecosystem Services
Review as a stand-alone process or integrate it into their
existing environmental management systems. In both cases,
the methodology can complement and augment the environmental
due diligence tools companies already use.
The Ecosystem Services Review can provide value to
businesses in industries that directly interact with ecosystems
such as agriculture, beverages, water services, forestry,
electricity, oil, gas, mining, and tourism.
It is also relevant to
sectors such as general retail, healthcare, consulting, financial
services, and others to the degree that their suppliers or
customers interact directly with ecosystems. General retailers,
for example, may face reputational or market risks if some of
their suppliers are responsible for degrading ecosystems and
the services they provide.
This publication describes the five steps for performing
an Ecosystem Services Review. It provides an
analytical framework, case examples, and helpful suggestions
for each step.
It concludes by highlighting a number of
resources managers can use when conducting an Ecosystem
Services Review, including a "dependence and impact assessment"
spreadsheet, scientific reports, economic valuation
approaches, and other issue-specific tools.
Global degradation of ecosystems and the services they
provide threatens to alter the landscape in which business
operates. The Ecosystem Services Review is a proactive approach
for companies to manage the risks and opportunities
that are emerging.
Furthermore, by helping companies make
the connection between healthy ecosystems and the bottom
line, it will encourage not only more sustainable business
practices, but also corporate support for policies to protect
and restore ecosystems.
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