Description
As with climate change a few years ago, executives are now beginning to recognize the importance of biodiversity for their future strategies. Many are also discovering business opportunities, not just threats.
As with climate change a few years ago, executives are now beginning to recognize the importance
of biodiversity for their future strategies. Many are also discovering business opportunities, not
just threats.
For most companies these days, the environment—which is synonymous with climate change
for many executives—has become an important topic. Companies know that consumers and
employees care about the environment, and their interest often presents real business opportunities
and risks. But another key environmental concern is emerging: biodiversity, or the diversity
of species, variety of ecosystems, and variability of genes. Biodiversity now occupies a similar
position in the public debate as climate change did in 2007. Our survey asked respondents about
what biodiversity means, how important it is to their businesses, and why.
1
The survey also asked
respondents what specifc risks their companies might face from reduced biodiversity, what actions
they are taking to address issues related to it, and what kinds of regulations they would support to
maintain biodiversity.
One of the most striking fndings is that a majority of executives, 59 percent, see biodiversity as more
of an opportunity than a risk for their companies. They identify a variety of potential opportunities,
such as bolstering corporate reputations with environmentally conscious stakeholders by acting
to preserve biodiversity and developing new products or ideas from renewable natural resources.
The positive outlook on biodiversity is in stark contrast to executives’ views on climate change in
late 2007, when only 29 percent saw the issue as more of an opportunity than a threat.
2
Perhaps
addressing climate change over the past few years has changed some executives’ views on the
potential upside of environmental issues.
1
The online survey was in the
feld from June 15 to 29, 2010,
and received 1,576 responses
from executives representing
the full range of regions,
industries, tenures, and
functional specialties.
2
“How companies think
about climate change:
A McKinsey Global Survey,”
mckinseyquarterly.com,
February 2008.
G
i
a
n
p
a
o
l
o
P
a
g
n
i
The next environmental issue for business
McKinsey Global Survey results:
2 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Just over half of respondents to this survey say their companies are taking some action to address
biodiversity. Notably, among those, the two most frequent steps are communicating about their
companies’ use of renewable natural resources and changing operations to reduce such use—even
in industries that are not highly regulated and whose operations don’t have much direct impact
on biodiversity. This priority for operations is consistent with fndings from other surveys on the
role of business in society, which suggest that perceptions of these issues have shifted over the
years: executives once approached them purely as a public-relations risk or opportunity but now
recognize the real impact they can have on operations and corporate value.
3
How much it matters
Nevertheless, respondents don’t consider biodiversity nearly as important as many other
environmental and sustainability issues. Nearly two-thirds say biodiversity is at least somewhat
important to their companies, but on a list of 12 issues, biodiversity ranks tenth in overall
importance—behind not only climate change but also pollution and human rights (Exhibit 1).
3
See, for example, “From risk to
opportunity: How global
executives view sociopolitical
issues,” October 2008;
“Valuing corporate social
responsibility,” February 2009;
and “How companies manage
sustainability,” March 2010.
All are available on
mckinseyquarterly.com.
Exhibit 1
What matters most to business
% of respondents, n = 1,576
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 1 of 6
Exhibit title: What matters most to business
Climate change/
energy ef?ciency
Extremely important
Don’t
know
Very important
Somewhat important
Not at all important
Among the following issues related to the environment, sustainability, and
biodiversity, which are most important to your business?
How important, if at all, is biodiversity to your business?
Waste/pollution/recycling
Water scarcity/water
quality/sanitation
Data privacy/identity theft
Human rights/labor issues
43
42
27
26
18
Financial inclusion
Ethical advertising/
marketing
Toxic materials
Obesity/malnutrition/
hunger
Biodiversity
15
15
14
10
9
HIV/AIDS and other global
public-health issues
No such issues are
important to our business
Animal rights
Other
Don’t know
7
2
2
5
3
9
18
37
32
4
3 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
When speaking for themselves personally, a majority of executives say they believe that threats
to biodiversity are increasing and that corporate actions are part of the overall threat. More than
half, or 55 percent, say biodiversity should be somewhere among the top ten items on the corporate
agenda—the same share that, in 2007, said climate change should be a priority.
Fairly large shares of executives point out several ways in which biodiversity is important to their
companies (Exhibit 2). Respondents at energy companies, who are the most likely to say their
companies’ operations have a direct impact on biodiversity, also—not surprisingly—highlight
regulation over all other areas of potential importance.
Conversely, fairly small shares of respondents predict that one or more risks related to biodiversity
are likely to become signifcant to their companies over the next one to three years. Water scarcity
leads the list, with 31 percent of respondents selecting it. (It is an especially great concern among
executives in the energy industry, where 49 percent select it, and in India, where 51 percent select
it.) Much smaller shares of respondents select other risks, including infectious disease, food
insecurity, fooding, droughts and desertifcation, and soil degradation.
Exhibit 2
Where biodiversity and business interests meet
% of respondents, n = 1,043
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 2 of 6
Exhibit title: Where biodiversity and business interests meet
Building, maintaining, or improving
our corporate reputation
Engaging with leadership’s or
employees’ personal interests
In what ways is biodiversity important to your business?
Aligning with the company’s business
goals, mission, or values
Responding to pressure from external
stakeholders such as NGOs,
1
consum-
ers, or distributors or retailers
Attracting funds from investors
interested in supporting companies
with good biodiversity practices
Responding to regulatory requirements
Strengthening our competitive position
53
49
48
37
34
33
Improving our operational
ef?ciency and/or reducing costs
Other
30
17
15
1
Nongovernmental organizations.
4 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Only 12 percent of respondents say their companies face a signifcant risk of a shortage
of crucial inputs to their products resulting from biodiversity issues; those in energy and
manufacturing are the most concerned (Exhibit 3). Much larger shares say they will face
pressure to change operations or products and services to reduce their impact on biodiversity.
Many say they face no risks at all: 39 percent expect to face no operational risk from issues
related to biodiversity over the next three years, and 34 percent expect no threats from external
issues such as water scarcity.
We also, however, identifed a group of respondents who said that biodiversity is important
to their companies, an opportunity, and aligned with business goals. For this group—which
includes a relatively high share of executives at food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and energy
companies, as well as hospitals—water scarcity, infectious disease, and food security top the
list of potential risks to both biodiversity and business. The food and beverage industry relies
on water for agricultural production and is reasonably concerned with future access to food;
pharmaceutical companies and hospitals have a vested stake in the development of treatments
for infectious diseases; and for energy companies, the production process involves water use as
Exhibit 3
Biodiversity can be risky business
% of respondents
1
Total,
n = 1,576
Energy,
n = 103
Financial,
n = 207
High tech/
telecom, n = 159
Manufacturing,
n = 216
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 3 of 6
Exhibit title: Biodiversity can be risky business
1
Figures do not sum to 100%, because respondents could select more than one risk.
Which of the following other risks related to biodiversity, if any, are likely
to become signi?cant risks to your business in the next 1 to 3 years?
Pressure to change our
operations to reduce impact
on biodiversity
30 49 24 28 37
Pressure to change our
products, services to reduce
impact on biodiversity
27 39 19 24 33
Lack of crucial inputs to
our products
12 18 5 6 18
No biodiversity issues will be
a risk to our business
39 21 48 48 26
Don’t know 9 4 12 6 9
Other 6 3 5 3 3
5 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
well as a host of other biodiversity issues, such as soil degradation, deforestation, and fooding.
These respondents are more than twice as likely as others to say biodiversity is important to
strengthen their companies’ competitive position, with 61 percent saying so; a quarter say
their companies will face the risk of losing a crucial input to their products if biodiversity is
reduced. Yet even for these companies, it is still only fourth on the list of all environmental and
sustainability issues.
What companies are doing and why
Just over half of respondents—53 percent—say their companies are taking action to address
biodiversity issues, though this is a slightly smaller share than the 59 percent who see it as a
business opportunity. Notably, the share of executives who see biodiversity as an opportunity
rather than as a risk is much higher than the share of respondents who said the same about
climate change in a 2007 McKinsey survey (Exhibit 4). Even so, the share taking some action
related to biodiversity is roughly consistent with the share of respondents who were taking
some action on climate change.
4
These fndings may suggest that opportunity and fear are equal
drivers of action on environmental issues.
One of the most frequently chosen actions—and no doubt one reason that so many see
biodiversity as an opportunity—is seeking to identify new products or ideas from renewable
natural resources (Exhibit 5). Among the executives who see biodiversity as most important,
59 percent are identifying new products or ideas.
However, most respondents are taking action in a fairly ad hoc way, perhaps because of the
relatively low importance of biodiversity compared with other issues. Among all respondents,
only a quarter have a formal biodiversity policy or strategy, and only 22 percent have formal
targets. Among those with any formal target, 62 percent have operational ones, and only
27 percent have fnancial ones.
5
Exhibit 4
Environmental issues: opportunity or risk?
% of respondents
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 4 of 6
Exhibit title: Environmental issues: opportunity or risk?
Whether given issue (biodiversity in 2010, climate change in 2007) is
seen more as an opportunity or a risk for “respondent's business”.
Dec 2007, n = 2,192 40 31 29
June 2010, n = 1,043 59 25 16
More of an
opportunity
About equally
both
More of
a risk
4
In the 2007 survey, respondents
were asked about taking action in
a range of different areas, such as
marketing, investing, and setting
strategy.
5
This fnding is consistent with
those of “Valuing corporate social
responsibility,” which found that
both companies and professional
investors believed it is diffcult to
defne meaningful metrics with
which to assess environmental,
governance, or sustainability
programs.
6 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Exhibit 5
Taking action on biodiversity
% of respondents
1
Total,
n = 841
Energy,
n = 70
Financial,
n = 106
High tech/
telecom, n = 69
Manufacturing,
n = 130
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 5 of 6
Exhibit title: Taking action on biodiversity
1
Respondents who answered “don’t know” are not shown.
What actions is your company taking?
Communicating our use of
renewable natural resources,
internally or externally
52 44 68 60 56
Changing our operations
to reduce use of renewable
natural resources
52 44 55 67 57
46 65 46 55 48
Measuring our use of
and impacts on renewable
natural resources
42 48 28 49 56
Actively seeking to identify new
products or ideas from
renewable natural resources
39 29 41 36 51
Taking steps to reduce the use
of renewable natural resources
throughout our supply chain
37 64 24 39 41
Joining industry organizations
or otherwise participating
in problem-solving sessions on
use of natural resources
35 29 34 29 32
Educating consumers on the
relations between our products
or services and renewable
natural resources
23 30 21 16 19
Taking steps to improve or
restore biodiversity, such as
participating in forest
carbon-offset markets
18 20 12 17 19
Trying to in?uence regulation
related to biodiversity
8 6 8 5 4 Other
26 27 34 33 20
Contributing to nonpro?t
organizations that improve or
sustain biodiversity
Respondents say consumers, followed by regulators, are the stakeholders with
the most impact on the actions their companies take to address biodiversity.
7 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Not all companies need to act
More than a third of respondents say their companies aren’t taking any actions related to biodiversity.
6
Among them, 37 percent say the reason is its lack of importance; far smaller shares cite a lack
of external pressure or more important uses for their businesses’ time or money. There’s little
consensus on what might spur them to take action; the top choice, selected by only 23 percent of
respondents, is regulatory requirements.
Separately, almost equal shares (37 and 36 percent, respectively) cite consumers and regulators as
the stakeholders who are likeliest to encourage action. These segments were also the top two choices
among the 2007 survey respondents whose companies were not then taking action on climate change.
The results highlight both the similarity between the two issues and the potential—if consumers and
regulators ratchet up the pressure to take action on biodiversity, as they have for climate change—for
more companies to do so.
Exhibit 6
Influencing regulation
% of respondents
Total, n = 1,576 Total, n = 150
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 6 of 6
Exhibit title: In?uencing regulation
How, if at all, do you think
businesses should try to
in?uence regulation related
to biodiversity?
How, if at all, does your
business currently try
to in?uence regulation related
to biodiversity?
Participating in industry groups to develop
information for lawmakers and regulators
related to biodiversity issues
55 70
Participating in industry groups to develop
voluntary standards in lieu of regulation
52 58
Participating in national or international
policy debates on biodiversity
42 61
7 20 Lobbying for our business alone
Don’t know 15 7
3 6 Other
Lobbying as part of industry or
other coalitions
28 54
6
The rest of the respondents
answered “don’t know.”
8 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Managing threats to biodiversity
When asked to pick the best way to infuence regulations related to biodiversity, more executives
choose participating in industry groups to develop information than anything else. Describing what
they are currently doing to infuence regulation, an even higher share say they are participating in
industry groups (Exhibit 6). The type of regulation favored by most respondents (45 percent) is tax
incentives or direct subsidies for actions related to conservation; 38 percent say industry-created
voluntary standards on the use of renewable natural resources would be acceptable. Less than a
quarter say their companies would support mandatory standards or reporting.
However, the responses suggest that addressing threats to biodiversity will take a concerted effort.
Sixty-fve percent of executives say the threats need to be addressed at a global, not local, level, and
61 percent say that although threats to biodiversity are linked to climate change, addressing the latter
alone won’t resolve all of the threats to the former that exist today.
Looking ahead
• Given that threats to biodiversity are getting more and more public attention, companies with any
direct or indirect exposure to biodiversity issues will beneft from addressing them in some way.
• For a company that wants to understand its exposure to these issues, a good frst step is assessing
the entire value chain to determine where it might be vulnerable to risks, which operations might be
threaten biodiversity, or where it might supply opportunities.
• A collaborative, industry-wide approach is necessary for understanding issues such as biodiversity
and exploring potential solutions. Although many companies are already involved in such coalitions
related to biodiversity, more could beneft from getting involved.
The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of Joshua Bishop of International Union for
Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and other colleagues involved in preparing a report for business, as
part of The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) study.
Contributors to the development and analysis of this survey include Sheila Bonini, a consultant
in McKinsey’s Silicon Valley offce, and Jeremy M. Oppenheim, a director in the London offce.
Copyright © 2010 McKinsey & Company. All rights reserved.
doc_842289313.pdf
As with climate change a few years ago, executives are now beginning to recognize the importance of biodiversity for their future strategies. Many are also discovering business opportunities, not just threats.
As with climate change a few years ago, executives are now beginning to recognize the importance
of biodiversity for their future strategies. Many are also discovering business opportunities, not
just threats.
For most companies these days, the environment—which is synonymous with climate change
for many executives—has become an important topic. Companies know that consumers and
employees care about the environment, and their interest often presents real business opportunities
and risks. But another key environmental concern is emerging: biodiversity, or the diversity
of species, variety of ecosystems, and variability of genes. Biodiversity now occupies a similar
position in the public debate as climate change did in 2007. Our survey asked respondents about
what biodiversity means, how important it is to their businesses, and why.
1
The survey also asked
respondents what specifc risks their companies might face from reduced biodiversity, what actions
they are taking to address issues related to it, and what kinds of regulations they would support to
maintain biodiversity.
One of the most striking fndings is that a majority of executives, 59 percent, see biodiversity as more
of an opportunity than a risk for their companies. They identify a variety of potential opportunities,
such as bolstering corporate reputations with environmentally conscious stakeholders by acting
to preserve biodiversity and developing new products or ideas from renewable natural resources.
The positive outlook on biodiversity is in stark contrast to executives’ views on climate change in
late 2007, when only 29 percent saw the issue as more of an opportunity than a threat.
2
Perhaps
addressing climate change over the past few years has changed some executives’ views on the
potential upside of environmental issues.
1
The online survey was in the
feld from June 15 to 29, 2010,
and received 1,576 responses
from executives representing
the full range of regions,
industries, tenures, and
functional specialties.
2
“How companies think
about climate change:
A McKinsey Global Survey,”
mckinseyquarterly.com,
February 2008.
G
i
a
n
p
a
o
l
o
P
a
g
n
i
The next environmental issue for business
McKinsey Global Survey results:
2 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Just over half of respondents to this survey say their companies are taking some action to address
biodiversity. Notably, among those, the two most frequent steps are communicating about their
companies’ use of renewable natural resources and changing operations to reduce such use—even
in industries that are not highly regulated and whose operations don’t have much direct impact
on biodiversity. This priority for operations is consistent with fndings from other surveys on the
role of business in society, which suggest that perceptions of these issues have shifted over the
years: executives once approached them purely as a public-relations risk or opportunity but now
recognize the real impact they can have on operations and corporate value.
3
How much it matters
Nevertheless, respondents don’t consider biodiversity nearly as important as many other
environmental and sustainability issues. Nearly two-thirds say biodiversity is at least somewhat
important to their companies, but on a list of 12 issues, biodiversity ranks tenth in overall
importance—behind not only climate change but also pollution and human rights (Exhibit 1).
3
See, for example, “From risk to
opportunity: How global
executives view sociopolitical
issues,” October 2008;
“Valuing corporate social
responsibility,” February 2009;
and “How companies manage
sustainability,” March 2010.
All are available on
mckinseyquarterly.com.
Exhibit 1
What matters most to business
% of respondents, n = 1,576
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 1 of 6
Exhibit title: What matters most to business
Climate change/
energy ef?ciency
Extremely important
Don’t
know
Very important
Somewhat important
Not at all important
Among the following issues related to the environment, sustainability, and
biodiversity, which are most important to your business?
How important, if at all, is biodiversity to your business?
Waste/pollution/recycling
Water scarcity/water
quality/sanitation
Data privacy/identity theft
Human rights/labor issues
43
42
27
26
18
Financial inclusion
Ethical advertising/
marketing
Toxic materials
Obesity/malnutrition/
hunger
Biodiversity
15
15
14
10
9
HIV/AIDS and other global
public-health issues
No such issues are
important to our business
Animal rights
Other
Don’t know
7
2
2
5
3
9
18
37
32
4
3 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
When speaking for themselves personally, a majority of executives say they believe that threats
to biodiversity are increasing and that corporate actions are part of the overall threat. More than
half, or 55 percent, say biodiversity should be somewhere among the top ten items on the corporate
agenda—the same share that, in 2007, said climate change should be a priority.
Fairly large shares of executives point out several ways in which biodiversity is important to their
companies (Exhibit 2). Respondents at energy companies, who are the most likely to say their
companies’ operations have a direct impact on biodiversity, also—not surprisingly—highlight
regulation over all other areas of potential importance.
Conversely, fairly small shares of respondents predict that one or more risks related to biodiversity
are likely to become signifcant to their companies over the next one to three years. Water scarcity
leads the list, with 31 percent of respondents selecting it. (It is an especially great concern among
executives in the energy industry, where 49 percent select it, and in India, where 51 percent select
it.) Much smaller shares of respondents select other risks, including infectious disease, food
insecurity, fooding, droughts and desertifcation, and soil degradation.
Exhibit 2
Where biodiversity and business interests meet
% of respondents, n = 1,043
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 2 of 6
Exhibit title: Where biodiversity and business interests meet
Building, maintaining, or improving
our corporate reputation
Engaging with leadership’s or
employees’ personal interests
In what ways is biodiversity important to your business?
Aligning with the company’s business
goals, mission, or values
Responding to pressure from external
stakeholders such as NGOs,
1
consum-
ers, or distributors or retailers
Attracting funds from investors
interested in supporting companies
with good biodiversity practices
Responding to regulatory requirements
Strengthening our competitive position
53
49
48
37
34
33
Improving our operational
ef?ciency and/or reducing costs
Other
30
17
15
1
Nongovernmental organizations.
4 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Only 12 percent of respondents say their companies face a signifcant risk of a shortage
of crucial inputs to their products resulting from biodiversity issues; those in energy and
manufacturing are the most concerned (Exhibit 3). Much larger shares say they will face
pressure to change operations or products and services to reduce their impact on biodiversity.
Many say they face no risks at all: 39 percent expect to face no operational risk from issues
related to biodiversity over the next three years, and 34 percent expect no threats from external
issues such as water scarcity.
We also, however, identifed a group of respondents who said that biodiversity is important
to their companies, an opportunity, and aligned with business goals. For this group—which
includes a relatively high share of executives at food and beverage, pharmaceutical, and energy
companies, as well as hospitals—water scarcity, infectious disease, and food security top the
list of potential risks to both biodiversity and business. The food and beverage industry relies
on water for agricultural production and is reasonably concerned with future access to food;
pharmaceutical companies and hospitals have a vested stake in the development of treatments
for infectious diseases; and for energy companies, the production process involves water use as
Exhibit 3
Biodiversity can be risky business
% of respondents
1
Total,
n = 1,576
Energy,
n = 103
Financial,
n = 207
High tech/
telecom, n = 159
Manufacturing,
n = 216
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 3 of 6
Exhibit title: Biodiversity can be risky business
1
Figures do not sum to 100%, because respondents could select more than one risk.
Which of the following other risks related to biodiversity, if any, are likely
to become signi?cant risks to your business in the next 1 to 3 years?
Pressure to change our
operations to reduce impact
on biodiversity
30 49 24 28 37
Pressure to change our
products, services to reduce
impact on biodiversity
27 39 19 24 33
Lack of crucial inputs to
our products
12 18 5 6 18
No biodiversity issues will be
a risk to our business
39 21 48 48 26
Don’t know 9 4 12 6 9
Other 6 3 5 3 3
5 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
well as a host of other biodiversity issues, such as soil degradation, deforestation, and fooding.
These respondents are more than twice as likely as others to say biodiversity is important to
strengthen their companies’ competitive position, with 61 percent saying so; a quarter say
their companies will face the risk of losing a crucial input to their products if biodiversity is
reduced. Yet even for these companies, it is still only fourth on the list of all environmental and
sustainability issues.
What companies are doing and why
Just over half of respondents—53 percent—say their companies are taking action to address
biodiversity issues, though this is a slightly smaller share than the 59 percent who see it as a
business opportunity. Notably, the share of executives who see biodiversity as an opportunity
rather than as a risk is much higher than the share of respondents who said the same about
climate change in a 2007 McKinsey survey (Exhibit 4). Even so, the share taking some action
related to biodiversity is roughly consistent with the share of respondents who were taking
some action on climate change.
4
These fndings may suggest that opportunity and fear are equal
drivers of action on environmental issues.
One of the most frequently chosen actions—and no doubt one reason that so many see
biodiversity as an opportunity—is seeking to identify new products or ideas from renewable
natural resources (Exhibit 5). Among the executives who see biodiversity as most important,
59 percent are identifying new products or ideas.
However, most respondents are taking action in a fairly ad hoc way, perhaps because of the
relatively low importance of biodiversity compared with other issues. Among all respondents,
only a quarter have a formal biodiversity policy or strategy, and only 22 percent have formal
targets. Among those with any formal target, 62 percent have operational ones, and only
27 percent have fnancial ones.
5
Exhibit 4
Environmental issues: opportunity or risk?
% of respondents
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 4 of 6
Exhibit title: Environmental issues: opportunity or risk?
Whether given issue (biodiversity in 2010, climate change in 2007) is
seen more as an opportunity or a risk for “respondent's business”.
Dec 2007, n = 2,192 40 31 29
June 2010, n = 1,043 59 25 16
More of an
opportunity
About equally
both
More of
a risk
4
In the 2007 survey, respondents
were asked about taking action in
a range of different areas, such as
marketing, investing, and setting
strategy.
5
This fnding is consistent with
those of “Valuing corporate social
responsibility,” which found that
both companies and professional
investors believed it is diffcult to
defne meaningful metrics with
which to assess environmental,
governance, or sustainability
programs.
6 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Exhibit 5
Taking action on biodiversity
% of respondents
1
Total,
n = 841
Energy,
n = 70
Financial,
n = 106
High tech/
telecom, n = 69
Manufacturing,
n = 130
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 5 of 6
Exhibit title: Taking action on biodiversity
1
Respondents who answered “don’t know” are not shown.
What actions is your company taking?
Communicating our use of
renewable natural resources,
internally or externally
52 44 68 60 56
Changing our operations
to reduce use of renewable
natural resources
52 44 55 67 57
46 65 46 55 48
Measuring our use of
and impacts on renewable
natural resources
42 48 28 49 56
Actively seeking to identify new
products or ideas from
renewable natural resources
39 29 41 36 51
Taking steps to reduce the use
of renewable natural resources
throughout our supply chain
37 64 24 39 41
Joining industry organizations
or otherwise participating
in problem-solving sessions on
use of natural resources
35 29 34 29 32
Educating consumers on the
relations between our products
or services and renewable
natural resources
23 30 21 16 19
Taking steps to improve or
restore biodiversity, such as
participating in forest
carbon-offset markets
18 20 12 17 19
Trying to in?uence regulation
related to biodiversity
8 6 8 5 4 Other
26 27 34 33 20
Contributing to nonpro?t
organizations that improve or
sustain biodiversity
Respondents say consumers, followed by regulators, are the stakeholders with
the most impact on the actions their companies take to address biodiversity.
7 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Not all companies need to act
More than a third of respondents say their companies aren’t taking any actions related to biodiversity.
6
Among them, 37 percent say the reason is its lack of importance; far smaller shares cite a lack
of external pressure or more important uses for their businesses’ time or money. There’s little
consensus on what might spur them to take action; the top choice, selected by only 23 percent of
respondents, is regulatory requirements.
Separately, almost equal shares (37 and 36 percent, respectively) cite consumers and regulators as
the stakeholders who are likeliest to encourage action. These segments were also the top two choices
among the 2007 survey respondents whose companies were not then taking action on climate change.
The results highlight both the similarity between the two issues and the potential—if consumers and
regulators ratchet up the pressure to take action on biodiversity, as they have for climate change—for
more companies to do so.
Exhibit 6
Influencing regulation
% of respondents
Total, n = 1,576 Total, n = 150
Survey 2010
Biodiversity
Exhibit 6 of 6
Exhibit title: In?uencing regulation
How, if at all, do you think
businesses should try to
in?uence regulation related
to biodiversity?
How, if at all, does your
business currently try
to in?uence regulation related
to biodiversity?
Participating in industry groups to develop
information for lawmakers and regulators
related to biodiversity issues
55 70
Participating in industry groups to develop
voluntary standards in lieu of regulation
52 58
Participating in national or international
policy debates on biodiversity
42 61
7 20 Lobbying for our business alone
Don’t know 15 7
3 6 Other
Lobbying as part of industry or
other coalitions
28 54
6
The rest of the respondents
answered “don’t know.”
8 The next environmental issue for business McKinsey Global Survey results
Managing threats to biodiversity
When asked to pick the best way to infuence regulations related to biodiversity, more executives
choose participating in industry groups to develop information than anything else. Describing what
they are currently doing to infuence regulation, an even higher share say they are participating in
industry groups (Exhibit 6). The type of regulation favored by most respondents (45 percent) is tax
incentives or direct subsidies for actions related to conservation; 38 percent say industry-created
voluntary standards on the use of renewable natural resources would be acceptable. Less than a
quarter say their companies would support mandatory standards or reporting.
However, the responses suggest that addressing threats to biodiversity will take a concerted effort.
Sixty-fve percent of executives say the threats need to be addressed at a global, not local, level, and
61 percent say that although threats to biodiversity are linked to climate change, addressing the latter
alone won’t resolve all of the threats to the former that exist today.
Looking ahead
• Given that threats to biodiversity are getting more and more public attention, companies with any
direct or indirect exposure to biodiversity issues will beneft from addressing them in some way.
• For a company that wants to understand its exposure to these issues, a good frst step is assessing
the entire value chain to determine where it might be vulnerable to risks, which operations might be
threaten biodiversity, or where it might supply opportunities.
• A collaborative, industry-wide approach is necessary for understanding issues such as biodiversity
and exploring potential solutions. Although many companies are already involved in such coalitions
related to biodiversity, more could beneft from getting involved.
The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of Joshua Bishop of International Union for
Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and other colleagues involved in preparing a report for business, as
part of The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) study.
Contributors to the development and analysis of this survey include Sheila Bonini, a consultant
in McKinsey’s Silicon Valley offce, and Jeremy M. Oppenheim, a director in the London offce.
Copyright © 2010 McKinsey & Company. All rights reserved.
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