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2 posts tagged with "Natural Capital"

Natural capital performance and governance.

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Most biodiversity systems break at scale

· One min read
James Hirst
Mozaic Earth

Most biodiversity systems break at scale.

Monitoring ecosystem extent and condition isn't difficult at one site. The challenge is doing it:

  • consistently
  • repeatedly
  • across multiple sites
  • and in a way that stands up to regulatory and investor scrutiny

Whether it's Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) in the UK, or wider nature-risk and disclosure frameworks globally, the expectation is the same:

Comparable. Repeatable. Defensible.

That's why we've made exploring sites simple inside Mozaic Earth.

If you're managing distributed land — utilities, infrastructure, forestry, developers — you need to move between sites instantly, compare conditions, track performance, and understand change over time.

Not through static PDFs.

Not buried in disconnected GIS systems.

But through a structured, repeatable workflow.

With our Site Explorer tool you can:

  • Navigate across assets and estates in seconds
  • Standardise monitoring protocols across every site
  • Compare surveys over time, like-for-like
  • Manage ecosystem extent and condition at both site and portfolio level

Whether it's 2 sites or 2,000, the workflow remains the same.

That repeatability is what makes monitoring defensible.

And defensibility is what makes nature data decision-grade.

If you're delivering monitoring services or managing a distributed estate, I'd be interested in your perspective.

#NatureIntelligence #Biodiversity #NaturalCapital #BNG #MozaicEarth

From nature spend to resilience ROI

· 2 min read
Sylvain Vaquer
Mozaic Earth

For water, power, rail, highways, and mining operators, ecological condition isn't a nice-to-have KPI for a CSR report. It directly affects infiltration, stability, and fuel load, which are leading indicators for floods, wildfires, faults, and failures.

For organisations that can effectively measure and prove it, this is a competitive advantage: they can fund the right mitigation, lower operating costs, and build long-term resilience for infrastructure and estates.

A few examples where we help customers and users prove cause and effect:

  • Water utilities: Catchment condition degrading leads to sewer flooding events and storm overflow stress, driving OPEX spikes, insurance claims, and compliance pain.
  • Energy networks and rail: Vegetation condition degrading leads to encroachment, tree fall, and wildfires, causing customer interruptions, restoration costs, and reputational impact.
  • Rail and highways: Ground and soil condition degrading leads to landslips, washouts, and closures, creating emergency works, delay costs, and safety risks.
  • Mining: Habitat condition degrading allows invasive species to outcompete natives, escalating eradication costs and increasing reputational and permitting risks.

Demonstrating that nature degradation equals operational and financial risk requires more integrated ecosystem condition monitoring, fusing condition data with incident data so teams can:

  1. Spot condition change early (leading indicator)
  2. Learn what mitigations work, site by site
  3. Allocate capital precisely, including nature-based solutions

In the UK, Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) has introduced an auditable way to measure habitat change and is now widely used. The next step is to use the same data and insights as resilience evidence, not just as a planning cost.

Original post: Sylvain Vaquer on LinkedIn