Australia In recent years,
Australia has included the nature-positive goal in its environmental policy. For example, the Australian government's
Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment, and Water released a Nature Positive Plan (NPP) in 2022. In this plan, the government set out proposed legal reforms, including to establish Environment Protection Australia and Environment Information Australia. As part of the legal reforms proposed by the NPP,
Minister for the Environment and Water,
Tanya Plibersek, proposed The Nature Positive (Environment Information Australia) Bill 2024 to establish Environment Information Australia. The bill defines nature-positive as "an improvement in the diversity, abundance, resilience and integrity of ecosystems from a baseline." This definition of nature-positive has received criticism because it does not include a 2020 baseline for measurable improvement, and instead leaves this to be determined by the Head of Environment Information Australia. Senior Lecturer in environmental policy at the
University of New South Wales, Megan Evans, described this as "absolutely greenwashing" and said that "it is a pathetic definition". However, this bill was later withdrawn. Australia hosted the Global Nature Positive Summit at
Sydney's
International Convention Centre from 8–10 October 2024. The aim of the summit was to "inform the design of nature positive activities" and boost private sector investment by bringing together ministers, private sector leaders,
First Nations peoples, scientists, academics, and community leaders.
European Union The
European Union (EU) has expressed support for the nature-positive goal. In September 2020,
President of the European Commission at the time,
Ursula von der Leyen endorsed the Leaders' Pledge for Nature. Later, at the 47th G7 Summit, the EU was among member states that made a commitment to halt and reverse biodiversity loss by 2030. The EU is also a member of the G7 Alliance on Nature Positive Economies (G7ANPE), established in April 2023. The
French,
Italian, and
German governments are members of the G7ANPE too. In June 2024, a mid-term review of the EU's 8th Environmental Action Programme reiterated a call to member states to "mainstream an ecosystem approach" and to work towards nature-positive economies and societies.
Japan The nature-positive goal has been discussed by the Japanese government since at least 2022. The Study Group on Nature Positive Economies was established by the
Ministry of the Environment in March 2022, leading to the publication of 'Transition Strategies toward Nature Positive Economy' in March 2024 by the Ministry of the Environment,
Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, the
Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, and the
Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism. The first J-GBF assembly, held in February 2023, announced the 'J-GBF Nature-Positive Declaration'. By March 2024, 28 organisations had made nature-positive declarations. At the second general assembly of the J-GBF, held in September 2023, a Nature-Positive Action Plan was announced. In October 2023, the J-GBF issued a press release calling on companies, local governments, NGOs, and other actors to issue and register nature-positive declarations that state an aim to achieve nature positivity. The
Japanese government is also a member of the G7 Alliance on Nature Positive Economies, along with other Japanese environmental initiatives and businesses: Keidanren Nature Conservation Council, Japanese Business Initiative for Biodiversity, Syneco,
Sumitomo Chemical, Karatsu Farm & Food,
Taisei Corporation, and the
IUCN Japan National Committee. The UK government later joined the G7 Alliance on Nature Positive Economies. when it was established after the
49th G7 summit. and
House of Lords in 2024, as well as in the
Environmental Audit Committee as part of an inquiry into the role of
natural capital in the
green economy. However, the UK is yet to make a legally-binding commitment to achieving the nature-positive goal. Targets for achieving the nature-positive goal were set in the 2023 'Environmental Improvement Plan', published by the
Department for Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs. This includes objectives for a nature positive
food system and determining investment pathways for key sectors to make the transition to a nature positive economy. However, the
Office for Environmental Protection, a regulatory body for environmental protection, said that the government was "largely off track" to meet the targets this plan set out in a progress report published in January 2024. In September 2021,
Nature Positive 2030 was published by the five statutory nature conservation bodies of the UK: the
Joint Nature Conservation Committee,
Natural England,
Natural Resources Wales,
NatureScot and the
Northern Ireland Environment Agency. This includes two reports, a summary and an evidence report.
Nature Positive 2030 sets out priority actions to achieve the nature positive goal, such as deploying
nature-based solutions, improving management of
protected areas, and developing a market for
green finance to support nature recovery. The report was praised by
Edwin Poots,
Environment Minister at the time. It received support from almost 100 companies. The UK government has also been called on by the
Wildlife Trusts to raise its ambition for nature positive development through the Biodiversity Net Gain policy. The
RSPB, a charity dedicated to the conservation of birds in the UK, has called for a nature-positive economy. Climate Cymru, RSPB Cymru, and Wales Environment Link have called for a Nature Positive Bill in
Wales.
Scotland The devolved
Scottish Government made a commitment to be nature positive by 2030 in its 'Scottish Biodiversity Strategy to 2045', published in December 2022 and later updated in September 2023. The Strategy sets out priority actions to achieve the nature positive goal and is part of Scotland's Biodiversity Delivery Framework (BDF). The BDF includes the Scottish Biodiversity Strategy to 2045 and 4 other elements: a Natural Environment Bill, delivery plans, an investment plan, and a reporting framework. == See also ==