FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – MONDAY 13 JULY 2026
Major Corporations’ Biodiversity Promises Lack Transparency and Accountability, Say Scientists
A groundbreaking new study published in One Earth reveals a stark disconnect between corporate biodiversity pledges and the ability to hold companies accountable for their environmental impact. Researchers from the University of Oxford and the Stockholm Resilience Centre meticulously analyzed 180 transnational “keystone” corporations—entities wielding outsized influence over global ecosystems—and found that while 79% claim to have biodiversity commitments, only 13% articulate these commitments with the clarity and precision necessary for external evaluation.
The study unpacks a critical accountability gap. True progress tracking depends on commitments that specify targets in terms of what biodiversity aspects are addressed, geographic scope, timelines, baselines, and metrics for assessment. Most companies fall far short, offering vague or inconsistent pledges that obscure actual contributions to biodiversity conservation. The research highlights troubling tendencies such as ambiguous language, misuse of technical terms, and selective evidence that undercuts environmental ambition.
Agriculture-related sectors showed comparatively stronger commitment frameworks, with companies in cocoa and soybean markets often specifying measurable goals. Conversely, industries like animal pharmaceuticals and oil and gas exhibited scant biodiversity strategies, with many firms failing to report any biodiversity-related information publicly. Alarmingly, none of the studied corporations released dedicated biodiversity reports, a key tool for transparency.
According to Dr. Sophus zu Ermgassen of Oxford’s Department of Biology, these findings demonstrate the challenge companies face in balancing ambition with feasibility. “Biodiversity commitments must transcend legal compliance and incorporate concrete implementation plans, allowing stakeholders to trace genuine progress,” he emphasizes. Complementing this view, co-author Dr. Thomas White underlines the transformative potential of clear, science-informed targets for corporations to act as genuine stewards of the biosphere.
The researchers also caution against “greenhushing,” where companies remain silent to avoid reputational risk if their efforts fall short. Barriers include limited harmonization of corporate goals with commercial interests, data gaps about global supply chain biodiversity impacts, and insufficient guidance on robust target-setting.
To overcome these challenges, the study advocates integrating mandatory reporting standards, fostering collaborations between businesses and scientific communities, and strengthening sector-wide sustainability initiatives. Additionally, heightened pressure from investors and regulatory bodies could incentivize transparency and more ambitious goal setting, particularly by embedding biodiversity criteria into stock exchange listings.
This research marks a pivotal step in defining the responsibilities of powerful corporations regarding biodiversity preservation. By establishing a clear framework to evaluate commitments, it lays the groundwork for improved accountability essential in halting and eventually reversing the accelerating global loss of biodiversity.
Subject of Research: Corporate biodiversity commitments and accountability
Article Title: Evaluating the biodiversity commitments of Earth’s keystone corporations
News Publication Date: Monday 13 July 2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.oneear.2026.101747
References: Criteria include commitment scope, timeframe, baseline, measurement, and quantitative targets
Keywords: biodiversity, corporate accountability, keystone corporations, environmental commitments, sustainability reporting, biosphere stewardship
Tags: accountability gaps in corporate sustainabilityBiodiversity Conservationbiodiversity targets and measurementchallenges in corporate environmental accountabilitycorporate biodiversity pledges meet comprehensive accountability standardscorporate environmental commitmentsimpact of corporate pledges on global ecosystemsindustry-specific biodiversity strategiesinfluence of major corporations on biodiversity conservationrole of scientists in assessing corporate commitmentstransparency and effectiveness of corporate sustainability goalstransparency in sustainability reporting



