Nature Positive Role of the Ports Sector
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Assessing organizational readiness and maturity
can help a company understand its performance
on the nature-positive journey and identify the most
suitable guidance and tools to drive action. Table 5 details recommended actions to deliver a nature-
positive strategy mapped to an organization’s level
of readiness and maturity.4.1 Align strategy with organizational maturityWhile many companies in the port sector have
already embarked on the nature journey and
embraced the five priority actions, making
transformative changes to business models by
2030 demands significant time and resource
investments from companies.
Delivering net-zero emissions and tackling nature
loss are highly interdependent goals. Climate change
is a main driver of biodiversity loss, and efforts to
tackle climate change cannot succeed without
safeguarding nature. Therefore, the nature-positive
transition aligns closely with companies’ net-zero
commitments and should be integrated into their
climate transition plans. Likewise, companies should
ensure that social objectives are integrated for a just
and equitable nature-positive transition.
Guidance is emerging on how to develop nature
transition plans or adapt net-zero transition plans
to include nature and biodiversity commitments
and objectives, supported by several institutions. For example:
–It’s Now for Nature’s Nature Strategy Handbook
is a practical guide to support businesses across
sectors in developing a nature strategy.
–TNFD will publish new guidance in 2025 on
recommendations for nature transition plans
for real-economy companies and financial
institutions. This document was launched for
public consultation in October 2024.
–CDP and WWF are developing transition
planning recommendations, including practical
guidance on tools and methodology.
–Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero
(GFANZ) has published a framework for net-zero
transition planning for financial institutions and
will release guidance on integrating nature into
these plans in early 2025.102 This document was
launched for public consultation in October 2024. Making
transformative
changes to
business models
by 2030 demands
significant time
and resource
investments
from companies.”
Mapping the components of a nature-positive strategy against organizational maturity TABLE 5
Components of
a nature-positive
strategyOrganizational maturity
Starting and developing Advanced and leading
Summary –Identify nature-related issues.
–Set a high-level ambition and/or targets for nature.
–Present stand-alone actions on nature. –Integrate nature into strategy and governance.
–Assess impacts and dependencies for all potentially
relevant realms.
–Set measurable and science-based targets for nature.
–Implement strategic action, redefine industry business
models and mobilize the whole value chain.
Foundations –Employ sectoral averages for high-level screening to
discern priority effects on nature.
–Use secondary data for materiality assessments to
gauge priority impacts and nature dependencies,
considering factors like environmental pollution.
–Use tools and guidance such as ENCORE,103 SBTN’s
guidance for businesses, Aqueduct from WRI,104
TNFD’s upcoming transition planning guidance,
WWF’s biodiversity risk filter and water risk filter,105
UNEP-FI’s report on high-risk sectors106 and the
Integrated Biodiversity Assessment Tool (IBAT).107 –Refine materiality assessment by measuring
impacts and dependencies on nature using primary
operations data and environmental indicators, and
undertake an in-depth analysis of significant risks
and opportunities, understanding their influence
on financial statements.
–Maintain a comprehensive grasp of organizational
resilience with an actionable plan for managing nature
risks and opportunities.
–Perform thorough valuations of all priority areas,
considering trade-offs, using value chain data
and recognizing the mutual benefits for business
and society.
–Use tools and guidance such as ENCORE, SBTN’s
step 1 – assess, step 2 – prioritize and TNFD’s LEAP
approach, Aqueduct from WRI, WWF’s biodiversity
risk filter and water risk filter, UNEP-FI’s report on
high-risk sectors and the IBAT
Nature Positive: Role of the Port Sector
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