Tag Archive for: National Biodiversity Action Plan

A progress report on the 4th National Biodiversity Action Plan 2023-2030 has been published with almost 80% of 194 actions on track or complete.

Minister of State for Nature, Heritage and Biodiversity, Christopher O’Sullivan TD, has published the report, prepared by the National Parks and Wildlife Service with input from the Inter-departmental Biodiversity Working Group, which finds that 44 actions have been fully completed since the National Biodiversity Action Plan was published in early 2024.

These include:

  • the establishment of a new online tool to track progress
  • actions for designated habitats and protected species, including the expansion of the network of National Parks and Nature Reserves.
  • new guidelines for the development of Local Authority Biodiversity Action Plans.
  • annual reporting for public bodies with a guidance document drafted by BFBI’s Research and Technical Lead Dr Emer Ní Dhúill launched last summer.
  • restoration efforts have intensified with a series of key stakeholder events regarding the preparation of the National Nature Restoration Plan (NRP).

Minister O’Sullivan said:

“The progress we are seeing reflects a truly collaborative effort across Government, public bodies and wider society to protect and restore nature, and I would like to thank everyone whose work has helped us get to this point. It’s vital now that we maintain this focus and keep moving forward together.

“Sustained commitment is essential to ensure that Ireland’s fourth National Biodiversity Action Plan – which was ranked as one of the best in the world by the WWF – can be translated into the lasting recovery that our natural world needs. More people than ever understand that nature is at the root of our culture, our health and wellbeing, and our economy.”

To progress the remaining actions, including some of the several of which BFBI is an owner, the report identifies a critical need to increase private sector participation and supports, and to improve the our biodiversity data infrastructure to inform future decision-making.

The NBAP is scheduled for a formal update in 2027 following the publication of the NRP.

Business for Biodiversity Ireland offer our members an easy-to-follow Roadmap to Nature Positive – and the second step of Phase 1: Assess, after getting started, is to make a commitment to champion and support the objectives of the international Convention on Biological Diversity. Read more below…

Business For Biodiversity Ireland invites all our businesses to sign our Biodiversity Commitment. This comes after reviewing resources to expand your knowledge in the area of biodiversity loss and becoming familiar with the concept of Nature Positive, which is currently being defined and examined by the Nature Positive Initiative, a collective of the world’s largest nature organisations, business and finance coalitions.

Nature positive is a term that defines the actions and activities of a business that reduce negative impacts on nature across their operations and value chain, with concurrent business activities that redirect resources and financial investments towards the restoration and protection of nature.

Click to learn more about Nature Positive.

The Irish government declared a biodiversity emergency in 2019. According to the National Biodiversity Action Plan 2023-2030, all sectors of society including the private sector have a responsibility for nature’s conservation, to protect and restore ecosystems and the services they provide. Nature-positive business models are inherently more resilient to the impacts of climate change, create diverse employment opportunities and encourage innovative approaches to value-chain management.

The BFBI Biodiversity Commitment pledges to champion and support, by all means possible, the three urgent objectives of the international Convention on Biological Diversity: 

  • Conservation of biological diversity and ecosystem services 
  • Sustainable use of its components 
  • Fair and equitable sharing of the benefits that arise out of the utilisation of resources 

This includes a commitment to analyse and monitor your business activities to understand both your direct impacts on nature and your direct dependencies on nature and the associated risks, including defining biodiversity loss as a business risk, incorporating it into your company risk management portfolio.

It is also necessary to commit to understanding the impacts within your value chain and use this information to incorporate nature into decision-making. This includes encouraging your suppliers to make a similar commitment to strive for a nature positive future.

Read the full Biodiversity Commitment HERE.

Become a BFBI member HERE.