Biodiversity: Nature by Another Name
Nature underpins every aspect of human existence—and it is in crisis.
New guidance helps companies estimate biodiversity benefits
As global momentum grows around nature‑positive actions and global biodiversity targets, companies are seeking guidance, approaches and tools that go beyond water risk mitigation to encompass ecosystem benefits. Yet few resources currently exist to account for the biodiversity benefits of corporate water stewardship projects. The newly released Biodiversity Benefit Accounting (BioBA) guidance fills this gap by offering a framework to support companies in integrating biodiversity into corporate water stewardship initiatives.
The guidance aligns with global biodiversity accounting efforts, including the Nature Positive Initiative (NPI) and the Align project, and complements previously developed benefit‑quantification resources such as Volumetric Water Benefit Accounting (VWBA) and Water Quality Benefit Accounting (WQBA).
BioBA provides companies and project partners investing in corporate water stewardship activities with clear guidance on how to:
BioBA is intended for a variety of audiences, including corporate sponsors, project implementers and third‑party benefit evaluators. It is applicable for voluntary corporate water stewardship and biodiversity projects across a wide variety of activities and interventions in terrestrial and freshwater aquatic ecosystems at a project‑site scale. It is not intended to be used to evaluate the impact of a company’s operations on biodiversity at the landscape, regional or national scale.
Quantifying and Evaluating the Biodiversity Benefits of Water Stewardship Projects
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BioBA was developed in close consultation with key stakeholder groups across companies, NGOs, sustainability disclosure organizations, government agencies and academic institutions around the world. This collaborative process was designed to ensure that BioBA is:
The work was carried out by a project team consisting of The Nature Conservancy (TNC), together with the Pacific Institute, CEO Water Mandate, LimnoTech, and Second Nature Ecology + Design, and supported by practitioner and technical input from nine corporate partners and members of an Expert Advisory Group representing the private sector, public sector, academia, NGOs, international organizations and civil society groups.
BioBA sits within a suite of guidance publications that support water stewardship practitioners in quantifying multiple benefits from corporate water stewardship activities, including nature‑based solutions (Brill et al., 2023). BioBA complements accounting frameworks focused on water volumes (WRI et al., 2025a), water quality (WRI et al., 2025b) and water access, and sanitation and hygiene (WASH) accounting (Jacobson et al., 2024). It utilizes the same structure and approach developed for these guidance documents to the extent possible.
Contact us at n.ofosu-amaah@TNC.ORG