Skip to content
5D Net Zero logo
b-corp logo
  • About
    • Our story
    • Meet the Team
    • Our clients
    • Net zero
    • Certification
    • Carbon reduction planning
    • Carbon footprinting
  • Sustainability services
    • Planet + Environmental Stewardship
    • People + Social Value
    • Profit + Responsible Growth
    • Carbon Offsetting
  • Resources
    • Sustainability News
    • Sustainability Swap Box
  • Contact us
Menu
  • About
    • Our story
    • Meet the Team
    • Our clients
    • Net zero
    • Certification
    • Carbon reduction planning
    • Carbon footprinting
  • Sustainability services
    • Planet + Environmental Stewardship
    • People + Social Value
    • Profit + Responsible Growth
    • Carbon Offsetting
  • Resources
    • Sustainability News
    • Sustainability Swap Box
  • Contact us
Linkedin-in Instagram Youtube
Book Your discovery call
BOOK CALL

Spring Into Action: Why Biodiversity Should Be on Every Business’s Agenda

kevin wang 9Pq2riM7F3o unsplash scaled

There’s something quietly powerful about spring. Trees begin to bud, pollinators return, and ecosystems start to stir back to life. But for many businesses, this seasonal shift passes largely unnoticed – a backdrop to the working day rather than a prompt for meaningful action. 

That’s starting to change. As regulatory frameworks tighten and stakeholder expectations rise, biodiversity is fast becoming a board-level conversation.  And spring, with its natural momentum, is the perfect moment to get ahead of it. 

The Regulatory Environment Is Shifting

Biodiversity loss, long recognised as one of the most significant risks facing the global economy, is now finally seeing meaningful governmental pressure on UK organisations to act. 

The UK’s Environment Act introduced Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) requirements, making it mandatory for new developments to deliver at least a 10% improvement in biodiversity.  

Meanwhile, international frameworks like the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) and the Science Based Targets for Nature (SBTN) are voluntary but fast becoming the expected norm for responsible businesses, giving organisations a structured way to assess, disclose, and act on their nature-related impacts. 

In the UK, the UKGBC’s Framework for a Nature Positive Built Environment (Feb 2026) represents the most comprehensive guidance yet for a UK sector, setting out practical and consistent actions organisations can take across strategy, design, construction, and operation. 

For many organisations, understanding what these frameworks mean in practice, and what they’re required to do, is the first and most important step. 

What Biodiversity Action Looks Like for Businesses 

Biodiversity action doesn’t have to mean sweeping transformation. For most businesses, it starts with understanding your footprint, where your operations, supply chain, and land use intersect with the natural environment, and identifying where meaningful, measurable improvements can be made and where action is needed to mitigate, or adapt to, nature-based risk to your business. 

For most businesses, this means four key areas of focus: 

  • Conducting a nature-related impact assessment aligned to TNFD or SBTN 
  • Developing a nature-positive strategy that integrates with your broader ESG commitments 
  • Establishing Monitoring, Reporting and Verification (MRV) frameworks to track and evidence biodiversity outcomes 
  • Aligning land use decisions with Defra’s environmental reporting guidance and the Statutory Biodiversity Metric (formerly Metrics 4.0) 

These aren’t just compliance boxes to tick. Done well, they represent a genuine opportunity to strengthen your environmental credentials, reduce risk, and demonstrate leadership in a space that matters increasingly to investors, clients, and communities. 

Bringing Your Employees Along 

Some of the most effective biodiversity action happens at the grassroots level, driven by engaged employees who understand why it matters and feel empowered to contribute. 

Spring offers a natural moment to spark that conversation. Whether it’s organising a team volunteering day at a local nature reserve, introducing biodiversity-friendly practices on your site, or simply sharing information about local ecosystems and what your business is doing to protect them – small steps can build real momentum. 

Beyond the tangible environmental impact, engaging your workforce on biodiversity can strengthen your social value story, support employee wellbeing, and contribute to a culture that genuinely cares about sustainability – not just as a policy, but as a practice. 

The Opportunity, Not Just the Obligation 

For many businesses who have either dipped their toe, or dived into nature positive action, it has been driven by wanting to take positive action, with a tangible output. Whether number of trees planted, pollution reduced or bird song heard, nature can feel local and grounded.  

Companies reviewing their sites often discover simple, low‑cost changes that reduce flood risk, improve soil stability, or cut long‑term maintenance costs by replacing heavily managed landscaping with nature‑rich habitat. 

Supply‑chain reviews can reveal where working with farmers or landowners to restore hedgerows, wetlands, or buffer zones leads to more reliable sourcing and reduced disruption. 
Even small, visible enhancements (such as pollinator‑friendly planting, green roofs, or nature corridors around facilities) can improve local community relationships and help secure planning approvals more smoothly.  

These nature‑positive actions don’t just benefit ecosystems; they improve business resilience, reduce operational risk, and provide demonstrable value to clients, investors, and employees who increasingly want to see companies taking meaningful environmental action.  

When nature thrives, businesses often find they do too. 

Why Acting Now Matters 

The businesses taking biodiversity seriously today are positioning themselves well for what’s coming. Reporting requirements will become more stringent. Supply chain scrutiny will increase. And the organisations that have already built robust nature strategies will find it far easier to meet those expectations, and to demonstrate meaningful progress. 

Spring is a reminder that nature doesn’t wait. Neither should your strategy. 

How 5D Can Help 

At 5D, we support businesses in developing nature-positive strategies that are practical, measurable, and aligned to the frameworks that matter, from TNFD and SBTN to BNG Metrics and Defra environmental reporting guidance.  

Whether you’re just starting out or looking to strengthen an existing approach, we’re here to help you build something that lasts. 

Our approach is hands-on and rooted in delivery. We help you apply the right metrics and frameworks in a way that works for your organisation, your sites, and your priorities. 

The result is support you can trust, turning nature commitments into real-world outcomes grounded in science with measurable improvements on the ground. 

Book a call to find out how we can help support your biodiversity journey. 

Book a 15-minute discovery call with our carbon experts

On the discovery call, we will ask you about your business, to understand your goals and advise how 5D Net Zero can help you on your net zero journey.

To start the process, just use our calendar to book a discovery call.

5D Net Zero
b-corp logo
  • Our Story
  • Our Clients
  • Your Climate Journey
  • Certified Standards
  • Sustainability News
    • Sustainability Swap Box
  • Contact Us
    • Careers
  • Our Story
  • Our Clients
  • Your Climate Journey
  • Certified Standards
  • Sustainability News
    • Sustainability Swap Box
  • Contact Us
    • Careers
  • Terms & Conditions​
  • Privacy Policy
  • Equality & Diversity Policy
  • ESG Policy
  • Sustainability Policy
  • Terms & Conditions​
  • Privacy Policy
  • Equality & Diversity Policy
  • ESG Policy
  • Sustainability Policy

Sign Up For The Latest News

Linkedin Instagram Youtube

Copyright ©2025 – 5D Net Zero

Manage Cookie Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}