Tag Archive for: The Business of Nature Positive

BFBI is delighted to host a guest article by Adam Condon, a student of The Business of Nature Positive module at Trinity College Dublin – an exploration of more sustainable options to address the nature-related impacts of waste generation from energy products after marathon events.

A Nature-Positive Roadmap for Sports Nutrition:

Finish Line Fallacy

Three weeks after last October’s Dublin Marathon, I was walking my dog along the road when he nosed something silver out of the hedgerow. A crumpled energy gel wrapper, still sticky with maltodextrin, I grabbed out of his mouth. We hadn’t walked fifty metres before he found another. Then another. The race was long over. The waste was not.

The maths here is grim but worth doing. Around 25,000 runners line up each year, and most marathon fuelling plans call for roughly ten gels across the 42 kilometres. That is potentially up to 250,000 single-use wrappers dropped in a single morning across Dublin’s roads, parks, and canals. And that only counts race day. Factor in the training block, months of weekend long runs through the Phoenix Park, along the city centre, out past UCD, and the real number climbs far higher. Silver sticky wrappers sit in hedgerows, parks, and gardens, from July to October, waiting for the dogs, foxes, and wildlife that smell food and pull them loose.

These wrappers cannot be recycled. They are multi-material laminates, meaning, plastic film fused to aluminium foil, and no recycling site in the country will take them (Ellen MacArthur Foundation, 2016). Because they can’t be recycled, over time they fragment into microplastics that leach into soil and waterways, entering food chains and degrading the Dublin biodiversity we are trying to restore (UNEP, 2021). For a sport built on being outdoors, that is a genuinely sticky irony.

A Product That Depletes Nature Twice

The litter we can see is only half the problem. This product depletes nature twice: once when it is made, and again when it is tossed. Working through the sports nutrition value chain, I was shocked by how deep the upstream damage runs. The fuel inside most gels, maltodextrin, comes from intensive corn or wheat monocultures. These systems strip soil and organic matter, lean on synthetic nitrogen fertiliser, and generate nutrient runoff that leads to algal blooms and aquatic dead zones far from the farm (Tilman et al., 2002). The wrapper is worse. Its aluminium foil lining starts life as bauxite ore, extracted through open-pit mining that tears through tropical forests and leaves behind toxic red mud lagoons in place of thriving ecosystems (Power, Gräfe and Klauber, 2011).

Through a double materiality lens, gel brands carry nature-related risk at both ends of their value chain. Upstream, they depend on degraded ecosystems for raw materials. Downstream, the product waste directly harms local biodiversity. Under the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD), companies are increasingly expected to disclose exactly these kinds of impacts and dependencies (EFRAG, 2024). Sports nutrition brands that ignore this two-way exposure are on borrowed time.

The “Design to Fail” Business Model

The current model is to sell-and-forget. Brands take high margins on the fuel and knowingly push the cost of the wrapper onto local councils and nature itself. The packaging design, at best, assumes that an exhausted runner, sticky-handed, oxygen-deprived, and kilometres from the nearest bin, will somehow hold onto multiple torn empty wrappers until they find one. That is not a realistic assumption. It is a product designed to fail.

The EU’s incoming Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR) turns this into a direct financial liability (European Commission, 2022). The PPWR introduces recyclability requirements, minimum recycled content thresholds, and Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) obligations rooted in the Polluter Pays principle. Brands still selling non-recyclable laminate packaging will face rising EPR levies, potential market restrictions, and inevitable reputational damage across the single market. The only question left is whether companies treat incoming regulation as a grudging cost or as impetus to improve their entire product.

“If You Sell the Fuel, Own the Wrapper”

A Nature Positive Roadmap

Nature Positive is not a slogan. The Nature Positive Initiative (2024) defines it as an ambitious goal referring to measurable outcomes that contribute to halting and reversing nature loss. In terms of sports nutrition, that means moving up the Mitigation Hierarchy. Instead of limiting damage at the end, we avoid the impact entirely through redesign, then actively restore the ecosystems the product touches along the way. The principle I propose is simple: if you sell the fuel, own the wrapper.

On the packaging side, viable alternatives already exist through emerging nature-based enterprises (NBEs). Notpla, a London-based startup, produces seaweed-based packaging that dissolves harmlessly in soil and water, captures and stores carbon in its structure during growth, and requires no arable land or freshwater to produce (Notpla, 2024). By addressing both climate change and biodiversity loss simultaneously, it offers a scalable solution to the polycrisis we face. They have already trialled it at the London Marathon. Picture a gel wrapper that, if dropped by a wrecked runner at mile twenty, breaks down into organic matter within weeks. The downstream biodiversity threat disappears.

On the ingredient side, brands can shift their maltodextrin sourcing towards regenerative agriculture systems that rebuild soil health, increase water retention, and restore microbial diversity (Rodale Institute, 2020). This turns the upstream crisis on its head: a nature-depleting input becomes a nature-restoring one. Major food companies are already investing in regenerative sourcing programmes. The sports nutrition sector has no excuse not to follow.

Runners care about the outdoors. They rely on the cultural ecosystem services, the recreation, amenity, and well-being values, provided by places like the Phoenix Park and the Grand Canal. A brand that delivers  the first genuinely Nature Positive gel, compostable wrapper, regeneratively sourced fuel, does not just avoid a compliance headache. It earns lasting loyalty from a community that can spot greenwashing a mile off. Research consistently shows endurance athletes are willing to pay a premium for sustainably packaged products (Trivium Packaging, 2023). An extra fifty cents per gel to protect the route you love running is not a hard sell.

Fuel the Runner, Not the Route

The sports nutrition industry has a choice ahead of it. One path leads to rising EPR fees, regulatory scrambling, and more silver gel wrappers piling up in Ireland’s hedgerows. The other leads to material innovation, restored supply chains, and brand storytelling that stands out more than any ad campaign.

Event organisers can help force this change. The Dublin Marathon and other mass-participation races should mandate compostable packaging for all sponsored nutrition products by 2028. If your brand wants endorsement, its wrapper should not end up in the Grand Canal.

The finish line is not the end of a product’s lifecycle. It is where accountability starts. If you fuel the runner sustainably, runners will buy the fuel.

References:
EFRAG (2024) EFRAG IG 1: Materiality Assessment Implementation Guidance. Brussels: European Financial Reporting Advisory Group.
Ellen MacArthur Foundation (2016) The New Plastics Economy: Rethinking the Future of Plastics. World Economic Forum.
European Commission (2022) Proposal for a Regulation on Packaging and Packaging Waste, COM(2022) 677 final. Brussels.
Nature Positive Initiative (2024) What does Nature Positive mean? Available at: https://www.naturepositive.org/ (Accessed: March 2026).
Notpla (2024) ‘Our Technology.’ Available at: https://www.notpla.com/technology (Accessed: March 2026).
Power, G., Gräfe, M. and Klauber, C. (2011) ‘Bauxite residue issues: I. Current management, disposal and storage practices.’
Hydrometallurgy, 108(1–2), pp. 33–45.
Rodale Institute (2020) Regenerative Organic Agriculture and Climate Change: A Down-to-Earth Solution. Kutztown, PA: Rodale Institute.
Tilman, D., Cassman, K.G., Matson, P.A., Naylor, R. and Polasky, S. (2002) ‘Agricultural sustainability and intensive production practices.’ Nature, 418(6898), pp. 671–677.
Trivium Packaging (2023) 2023 Buying Green Report. Amsterdam: Trivium Packaging. Available at: https://buyinggreen.triviumpackaging.com (Accessed: March 2026).
UNEP (2021) From Pollution to Solution: A Global Assessment of Marine Litter and Plastic Pollution. Nairobi: United Nations Environment Programme

Would you like to participate in The Business of Nature Positive?

BFBI Business Programme Lead, Dr Catherine Farrell CIEEM is an Assistant Professor of Business & Nature at Trinity College Dublin. This past academic year in Trinity Business School, she and a group of students engaged with businesses from a broad range of sectors in Ireland for a new module, The Business of Nature Positive.

From SME to major legal firms, to real estate to aviation, 34 students worked with 15 businesses to build understanding of their impacts and dependencies on nature, and how they can address nature-related risks, as well as explore opportunities through nature-positive actions. You can read more about the module, which is supported by the Business for Biodiversity Ireland team, here, and sign up after reading the full Expression of Interest document below.

Here are some of the testimonials from the Sustainability Champion Leads that engaged with us this year to inspire you to participate – whether your business is just one person / a small team or large scale, size does not matter:

Engaging with the students through the course was valuable to us as it provided an impetus to tackle the real challenges we must overcome. Coming from outside our domain was also useful as they were able to provide a different perspective. – Jane, Trinity College Dublin.

 

This was a really rewarding experience. The module was run very professionally and the students’ level of engagement exceeded expectations, as did the output which will be very complimentary to our sustainability strategy around biodiversity. – Neil, Hibernia Real Estate.

 

Working with our students helped put our efforts and plans into perspective… Their ideas to expand nature-positive businesses – especially their most simple ideas – have inspired. – Patrick, Notre Dame Dublin.

 

I would definitely encourage any business to get involved, the students have so much knowledge and come with lots of ideas about embedding sustainability. The end report is written specifically for your organisation which was insightful and well written. Overall, a great experience and hopefully the students thought it was useful too! – Dee, Chartered Accountants Ireland.

 

A very positive experience, as the students were really engaged and interested. I think they learned a lot from this initiative, as did we! – Megan, Native Events.

 

It has been a great pleasure working with the students and collaborating with Dr Catherine Farrell. Viewing our business from a different perspective has been incredibly valuable. We hope The Shannon Airport Group can continue to collaborate with Trinity College in the future. – Arek, The Shannon Airport Group.

 

It was a pleasure to work with the students of the Business of Nature Positive module at Trinity Business School under the guidance of Dr Catherine Farrell. The programme provided me with hands-on practical experience … and the resulting report will be a very useful tool in our biodiversity strategy for the future. For businesses that have not yet started evaluating their biodiversity-related impacts, risks and opportunities this is a valuable programme and one I can highly recommend. – Lorraine, A&L Goodbody.

The call for businesses to engage with this year’s student (academic year 2025-2026) is now open – an opportunity for you to learn more about sustainability reporting for your business – read the Expression of Interest PDF linked below with full details of what’s involved below and sign up HERE.

Poster in dark red with white text and logos

Expression of Interest: TBS Nature positive module 4_6_2025

Business For Biodiversity Ireland is delighted to announce that Dr Catherine Farrell is moving over from our Board of Directors to take on the role of Business Programme Lead.

A pioneer of ecological restoration and research in Ireland and internationally, having developed Ireland’s first Biodiversity Action Plan for a corporate body (Bord na Móna), Catherine is a Senior Research Fellow in the School of Natural Sciences and Adjunct Teaching Fellow in Trinity Business School at Trinity College Dublin.

Catherine developed a new TCD module for 2024-2025, The Business of Nature Positive, which incorporates learnings about nature, society and economy, exploring ways for undergraduate students to work with businesses in Ireland to support the global Nature Positive Initiative, and report through the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive.

Catherine worked on the EPA-funded research project INCASE, applying the UN SEEA Ecosystem Accounting framework at catchment scale in Ireland up to 2022, and her current research as part of BiOrbic National Bioeconomy Research Centre focuses on developing mechanisms to structure, finance, monitor and communicate the direct impacts and broader societal benefits of nature restoration (Project ReFarm).  She was lead organiser of the Peatlands Gathering 2021, and is also a member of the ongoing National Land Use Review process.

Read more on our Meet the Team page.

 

Want a deeper understanding of your business’ impacts and dependencies on nature? Wondering where to start with nature-related disclosures? Lost in a fog of TNFD / GRI / EFRAG / CRSD alphabet soup? Keen to develop a roadmap to Nature Positive for your business but don’t know where to start?

Business For Biodiversity Ireland is participating in the development of a new module with Trinity College Dublin’s Dr Catherine Farrell titled ‘The Business of Nature Positive’ and are inviting businesses who would be interested and willing to:

  • participate in Trinity Business School undergraduate / student-led research to trial the application of nature-related reporting frameworks and tools, and
  • explore ways to develop a roadmap to Nature Positive.

Businesses rely on many aspects of nature and climate to carry out day-to-day business. Recognising these dependencies, as well as the impacts of business on nature, new reporting requirements under the new EU Corporate Social and Responsibility Directive (CSRD), will fast become a reality for Irish businesses.

In response to the need to build capacity for present and future business needs, Trinity Business School is developing this module to be delivered to 4th year undergraduates in the 2024/2025 academic year and facilitate learning in how to apply and communicate relevant nature-related reporting and disclosure frameworks for businesses, helping to identify steps to nature positive and through these processes assist businesses to integrate nature into decision making.

We expect the input from the business to be by a nominated staff member / sustainability business champion working directly with the TCD students. We expect the work to involve at minimum approximately 8-10 hours in total over a period of 4 months (largely between December and mid-April 2025 – download a breakdown of time and commitment expected via the PDF at the end of the article.)

As a participating business, through engagement in this process, you will have opportunities to:

  • Benefit by receiving bespoke support in kickstarting scoping for a materiality assessment for your business
  • Assistance in taking the first steps in identifying data available / potential data needs for nature related reporting
  • Develop a deeper understanding of your business’ impacts and dependencies on nature,
  • Begin the thought process as to how to develop a roadmap for nature positive for your
    business, and
  • Trial approaches / identify opportunities for communicating nature related issues to
    stakeholders (internal and external).

Once we have an overview of interested businesses (small or large, of any sector), the module coordinator will follow up with a questionnaire to determine your suitability in terms of logistics and availability.

NB: Please submit an expression of interest form HERE.

This call for Expressions of Interest will close in early July.