‘Nature positive’ is not a slogan – it’s an inspiring ambition and a measurable goal

Embracing change is necessary as the climate and nature crises move toward irreversible tipping points, and the costs for individuals and the economy rise exponentially. In fact, change is inevitable — whether we choose it or wait until it is forced upon us by nature herself.
But transitions are filled with uncertainty, and natural evolution has forged in us a short-term, risk averse attitude. In addition, vested interests and privilege holders who benefit from business as usual are resisting change. We are seeing all this play out in society today. In our conflicted, polarized and confused world, the old is failing and the new is not yet emerging at the scale and pace necessary.
In this environment it’s critical to frame a clear, concrete and inspiring vision that fundamentally drives change. Generic narratives and vague aspirations won’t drive action and may contribute to deeper cynicism that change is not possible. The world has adopted globally relevant and measurable goals for climate, such as maintaining the average global temperature well below 2°C and “halting and reversing biodiversity loss” — or becoming “nature positive,” for short.
Against this backdrop of urgency, the article “14 Sustainability clichés to retire in 2025” published by Trellis on July 30, suggests that we abandon some key terms that represent vital goals to achieve a sustainable future. I argue that this is not what we need — we need to ensure that companies, organizations and governments use them correctly.
These include terms like net-zero emissions, nature positive (initially defined in a 2021 paper then adopted in the language of the Mission of the Global Biodiversity Framework of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity adopted in 2022), and circularity in the context of circular economies, commonly defined as the goal to “reduce, reuse and recycle” in order to live within the world’s natural resource limits.
Confusion and cynicism
Dismissing these well-defined and broadly adopted terms means also dismissing the ambition they signify, and the goals, targets and pathways that drive action — that are in fact crucial in mobilizing and converging efforts. Listing them alongside generic adjectives like “green” or “ecofriendly” and calling for them to be “retired” or “ditched” is dangerous. It runs the risk of feeding confusion and cynicism — and worse, undermining action — at a time when representatives of the status quo are already actively seeking to derail the momentum on sustainability.
The idea of a post-truth world has emerged — one where emotion and personal belief shape public opinion more than objective facts. But facts matter. The planet is finite, and humanity needs to come to terms with living within planetary boundaries. So when we witness attempts to undermine ambition or blatantly misuse important terms, our collective response must be to both defend the terms and their ambition, and call out those who intentionally seek to misuse them.
If we believe that decarbonizing our economy, halting and reversing biodiversity loss and reducing overconsumption and waste are key pillars of a sustainable, safer, more prosperous and equitable future, do we really think that erasing language and targets like net-zero emissions, circular economy and net-positive biodiversity will help advance the climate, nature and waste agendas?
We must resist this temptation, because then the only alternative is to begin afresh with new terms and new definitions that must follow a long and arduous path to political and societal acceptance — something that humanity simply does not have time for, given the urgency of runaway climate change and collapse of crucial ecosystems and benefits that nature provides. The real issue is not with the terms themselves, but rather with the way they are used. Unsubstantiated words and claims should be opposed without hesitation. The clearer the definitions, the easier it is to prevent or call out their misuse.
Measurable ambition to drive action
That’s why we were very careful in defining the term nature positive from the start, and expanding upon it in the recently published book Becoming Nature Positive. It’s also why we are now finalizing metrics and guidance to credibly and practically measure nature-positive outcomes, with the help of a group of global companies from the most relevant sectors and with oversight from a group of leading technical organizations to ensure credibility.
At the Nature Positive Initiative we are strong advocates of measuring concrete action and outcomes through standardized metrics and guidance. Still, I believe that the use of inspirational language like nature positive — not as a slogan, but as a clear vision and a measurable goal — is essential to draw people in and define in accessible words the aspiration behind the term to less expert audiences. Using language that galvanizes action at the scale required is key to achieving our collective sustainability goals.
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