The International Standards Organisation (ISO) has published its latest framework ISO 17298:2025 Biodiversity in Strategy and Operations Standard on October 7th 2025. This marks a significant turning point for organisations seeking to embed nature, specifically biodiversity and ecosystems, resilience into their strategy and operations. As regulatory and reputational pressures continue to increase alongside growing investor and stakeholder expectations, there is an urgent need to protect the ecosystem services on which business depends. This standard sets a global benchmark for integrating biodiversity into corporate frameworks.
The ISO 17298 Biodiversity Standard is the first international standard dedicated specifically to helping organisations integrate biodiversity considerations effectively into strategy and operations. It addresses a clear gap: until now, many organisations have had carbon or climate focus in their management systems (e.g., ISO 14001) but lacked a globally harmonised standard for biodiversity. The standard explicitly supports the Kunming–Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF), the TNFD recommendations and existing management systems such as ISO 14001 and ISO 26000 (social responsibility).
Key take-aways from the standard’s Scope:
The standard applies to any organisation, regardless of size, sector, geography or stage of biodiversity integration.
What this means for Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) managers and directors:
Learn More: Carbon Emissions and Biodiversity
As the standard has only just been released, ESG managers may still struggle with how to approach and implement the ISO 17298 biodiversity standard. It’s advisable that they work with third-party sustainability consultants who are familiar with the biodiversity framework to adapt it into their ESG strategy. Here are some initial steps ESG managers/directors can take in the meantime:
Additionally, ensure biodiversity indicators are classified with the Driver-Pressure-State-Impact-Response or DPSIR framework, as outline in Clause 7.4 of ISO 17298.
The standard is interoperable with management systems such as ISO 14001 (environmental), ISO 26000 (social responsibility) and supports disclosure frameworks such as TNFD. It directly links to the global biodiversity framework (the Kunming-Montreal GBF) – the standard supports corporate disclosure and action under Target 15 of that framework. Annex A also references supporting frameworks and tools including IPBES, IUCN, SBTN, GRI, OECD Due Diligence and the Open Standards for conversation, reinforcing its interoperability. By embedding biodiversity into your corporate nature strategy, the standard helps integrate nature-related risks/opportunities alongside climate and social issues – a holistic sustainability approach.
The nature-dependence of businesses is high (half of global GDP) and biodiversity loss translates into supply-chain risk, regulatory risk, reputational risk and capital access risk. The ISO 17298 Biodiversity Standard offers organisations of all sizes and across sectors a clear, structured roadmap for moving from ambition to action in biodiversity management. It guides the embedding of biodiversity into corporate nature strategy and is designed to help organisations manage dependencies and impacts, strengthen resilience and unlock new opportunities in a world where nature is increasingly central to business success. While ISO 17298 is voluntary, its principles are expected to underpin upcoming reporting obligations under frameworks such as the EU CSRD ESRS E4 and TNFD. Taking early action under the ISO 17298 Biodiversity Standard is a strategic way to future-proof operations, demonstrate leadership and transition to a nature-positive economy.