Research & insight

Turning Frameworks into Insight: Applying Responsible Capital to the WEF Nature Positive Guide

By
Ben Levett
May 7, 2025
3
 min read
 min watch
Turning Frameworks into Insight: Applying Responsible Capital to the WEF Nature Positive Guide

Research & insight

Turning Frameworks into Insight: Applying Responsible Capital to the WEF Nature Positive Guide

By
Ben Levett
May 7, 2025
3
 min read
 min watch

The World Economic Forum’s recently published Nature Positive Corporate Assessment Guide for Financial Institutions sets out a wide-ranging agenda for incorporating nature-related risks and opportunities into financial decision-making. Organised around 11 high-level indicators, the framework offers a structured basis for due diligence—but the indicators themselves function more as thematic entry points than concrete metrics.

This is precisely where Responsible Capital excels: by translating broad, qualitative objectives into structured outputs using natural language processing (NLP) applied to corporate disclosures. Our approach combines semantic search with intelligent classification, enabling efficient portfolio-wide assessments grounded in real reporting data.

From Framework to Data: Testing Indicator 1

To demonstrate, we applied Responsible Capital to Indicator 1, which focuses on double materiality—the assessment of both impacts on nature and risks from nature across portfolios. These assessments are often approached in two complementary ways:

  • Top-down: Applying sector-based materiality frameworks to identify typical risk profiles.
  • Bottom-up: Analysing what companies themselves declare or imply in their reporting.

Because company disclosures often reflect the established materiality norms, the two results frequently overlap. But having a tool that can parse these statements at scale—and then structure and classify the findings—helps uncover both expected and emerging risks, as well as surface the contextual detail.

For this exercise, we assessed all FTSE100 constituents using index weights and applied two taxonomies:

  • Impacts on nature: Assessed using an ENCORE-style list of environmental impact drivers.
  • Risks from nature: Assessed using a taxonomy covering physical (acute and chronic) and transition risks.

Findings in Focus: Themes and Narrative Detail

Some expected themes emerge prominently. Climate change and pollution dominate as commonly referenced issues, if sometimes generically or tangentially so, appearing either as direct operational concerns or through supply chain and financed exposures. These broad signals provide the starting point, but further nuance can be added by running additional queries—such as assessing the degree of materiality, exploring related controversies, or identifying associated metrics.

Where Responsible Capital adds further value is in surfacing the qualitative narrative that helps explain and enrich quantitative patterns. For example:

EasyJet “EasyJet acknowledges that sustainability, particularly carbon emissions from flights and their contribution to climate change, is a significant issue. They are focusing on lowering the carbon intensity of their flights, reducing noise pollution, managing waste, decreasing the use of plastic, and improving overall environmental performance. They also mention assessing water, biodiversity and ecosystem services and emissions to land and water as non-material for easyJet direct operations”

AstraZeneca “AstraZeneca recognizes that its business potentially risks contributing to direct drivers of change in nature such as land, water and sea use change, pollution and climate change. Impacts from AstraZeneca's water use can occur where their manufacturing and supplier sites are located if withdrawal volumes are poorly managed. The materials needed for AstraZeneca's medicines can harm the environment if not properly managed  and some hazardous materials cannot be substituted leading to waste that is hard to reuse, recycle, or repurpose and requires special treatment  The aqueous discharges from certain AstraZeneca's manufacturing processes may contain high levels of Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) and Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD)  and these discharges may also contain APIs  which could potentially impact local ecosystems. AstraZeneca's products rely on natural raw materials such as timber and palm oil where timber is used for labelling, packaging, and shipping medicines, whilst palm oil derivatives serve as excipients”

Portfolio Risk Patterns at Scale

On the company-risk side of double materiality, the results again offer some revealing insights. While many disclosures understandably tend toward comprehensive “tick-box” all-inclusive risk registers—especially in regulated reporting—the breadth and depth of exposure nonetheless remains notable.

FTSE100 noted risks from nature:

Nature ‘event risks’ are broadly recognised either directly or, in the case of financial institutions, in terms of financed / financial exposure. Chronic climate-related issues, particularly water scarcity, stand out as elevated concerns at the portfolio level.

On the transition side, policy and regulatory risk, along with market risks from shifting demand, appear on the watchlist for around half the index. Legal liability and capital access risks are less frequent but still significant and potential flags to investigate further.

Narrative analysis once again helps move beyond boilerplate by surfacing operational detail and company-specific vulnerabilities. For instance, for a company you might expect to have relatively limited risk declarations:

Ashtead Group “Breaches of environmental regulation potentially create hazards to employees, damage to reputation, and expose the Group to the cost of investigation and remediation, as well as fines and penalties. The transition to a lower-carbon economy also poses certain risks, including increased capital expenditure for low- or zero-emission technologies and increased operating expenses from rising transportation and energy costs. Acute weather events could disrupt the supply chain, affecting the ability to acquire new fleet. Higher temperatures may reduce labour capacity for field teams, increasing costs and prompting investment in staff health and well-being. Market risk may arise from changes in energy pricing and the availability of alternative energy sources. A failure to meet climate-related commitments could result in loss of revenue or regulatory penalties.”

From Overview to Depth: Structured Entry Points for Deeper Analysis

Responsible Capital supports a two-tiered workflow:

  1. Portfolio screening via structured, question-based Assessments.
  2. Company-level follow-up via the Disclosure Assistant, allowing users to hold natural conversations to follow investigations where needed.

Users can begin with a high-level scan and then drill down into detailed findings—exploring issues across indicators, companies, or themes.

Whether working from the WEF framework or designing a custom one, Responsible Capital enables an efficient and evidence-backed approach to environmental and ESG insight.

Conclusion

Frameworks like the WEF’s Nature Positive Guide offer useful signposts. But turning them into practical, scalable workflows requires tools that can handle complexity, volume, and nuance. Responsible Capital provides that bridge: connecting qualitative narrative to structured insight, while maintaining transparency and traceability.

Whether you're exploring nature-related risks across a portfolio or designing a bespoke ESG framework, Responsible Capital equips you with the tools to do so at scale—with structure, nuance, and traceability built in.

https://responsiblecapital.io/

Data
ESG
Responsible Capital
Disclosures
Consulting
Ben Levett
Ben Levett
Lead ESG Researcher
Neural Alpha

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