
Oceans: Investors’ Blind Spot: Understanding Marine Ecosystem Services
Ecosystem Services Explained: Marine Ecosystems Oceans are central to the nature conversation yet are less understood or talked about than other aspects of natural capital.

Ecosystem Services Explained: Marine Ecosystems Oceans are central to the nature conversation yet are less understood or talked about than other aspects of natural capital.

Preamble ISS ESG’s Quarterly Engagement Update series highlights key trends that emerge through activities conducted on behalf of participating investors under ISS ESG’s Collaborative Engagement

This post was revised in May 2025. Natural Capital = Assets and Ecosystem Services Nature is everything around us: land, rivers, oceans, living organisms, climate.

Preamble ISS ESG’s Quarterly Engagement Update series highlights key trends that emerge through activities conducted on behalf of participating investors under its Collaborative Engagement Services.

Land Use and Management’s Impact on Key Environmental Risks The two major environmental concerns dominating investor discussions today are climate change and biodiversity. The Stockholm

Report enables investors to compare a portfolio’s biodiversity risk and impact against a benchmark, among other use cases NEW YORK (January 18, 2024) — ISS

ISS ESG Thought Leadership publications in 2023 covered a variety of ESG-related topics with significant relevance for investors. The selected publications highlighted below, which range

Preamble ISS ESG’s Quarterly Engagement Update series highlights key trends that emerge through activities conducted on behalf of participating investors under its Collaborative Engagement Services.

Preamble ISS ESG’s Quarterly Engagement Update series highlights key trends that emerge through activities conducted on behalf of participating investors under its Collaborative Engagement Services.

Key Takeaways: The impact on biodiversity of global equities can be measured through the Potentially Disappeared Fraction of Species (PDF) and the Mean Species Abundance