Biodiversify has published a new guide aimed at helping sustainability and nature teams turn biodiversity risk into a clearer business case for senior leadership.
The 22-page publication, Embedding Nature into Enterprise Strategy, draws on discussions with sustainability leaders at a closed-door session held at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, as well as input from Biodiversify’s Nature & Biodiversity Peer Group. According to the consultancy, representatives from 56 companies took part in the Kew session, including Primark, The Co-op Group, and The Crown Estate, with the participating organisations collectively accounting for more than £1.4trn in annual revenue.
The guide is positioned as a practical response to a familiar problem for large businesses. Awareness of nature-related risk is rising, but many organisations still struggle to convert ecological dependence, biodiversity exposure, and supply chain vulnerability into language that resonates with finance, procurement, and executive teams. Biodiversify says the publication is designed to close that gap by setting out the structure of an effective internal business case, alongside examples of how sustainability leaders are already approaching the issue.
Among the recommendations are starting with water as an entry point where financial materiality is already understood internally, and reframing “nature risk” for different business functions. Procurement teams, for example, may respond more readily to “supply chain continuity”, while risk teams may engage more directly with “asset protection” than with broader “nature positive” language.
Sam Sinclair, Co-Founder and Director at Biodiversify, said: “Nature is not a ‘nice-to-have’ for business; it completely underpins the stability of our supply chains.
“As climate change accelerates and ecosystems become more vulnerable, companies that fail to understand their dependence on nature risk serious disruption and price volatility.
“A strong business case makes clear where the risk sits, why timing matters, and what level of commitment is required. The good news is that many leading businesses are recognising this early and taking concrete actions to strengthen their resilience.”
The release lands as nature-related reporting, regulatory scrutiny, investor expectations, and supply chain resilience move further into mainstream corporate planning. For many businesses, the challenge is no longer whether biodiversity belongs in strategy discussions, but how to frame it in operational and financial terms that can support investment decisions. Biodiversify’s argument is that progress depends less on abstract ambition and more on translating nature into the language of continuity, cost, and resilience.
The full guide is available here.





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