1、Nature Positive:Role of the Port SectorI N S I G H T R E P O R TJ A N U A R Y 2 0 2 5Images:Getty ImagesDisclaimer This document is published by the World Economic Forum as a contribution to a project,insight area or interaction.The findings,interpretations and conclusions expressed herein are a res
2、ult of a collaborative process facilitated and endorsed by the World Economic Forum but whose results do not necessarily represent the views of the World Economic Forum,nor the entirety of its Members,Partners orotherstakeholders.2025 World Economic Forum.All rights reserved.No part of this publicat
3、ion may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means,including photocopying and recording,or by any information storage and retrieval system.ContentsForeword 3Foreword 4About the Nature Positive Transitions report series 5Executive summary 6Introduction 71 Where the sector is today 131.1
4、 Sector overview 141.2 Progress is promising but needs to accelerate 152 Nature-related impacts and dependencies 172.1 Double materiality 182.2 Land,water and sea use change 202.3 Greenhouse gas emissions 212.4 Pollution 222.5 Invasive species 223 Five priority actions 233.1 Sensitively plan port ar
5、ea to minimize impacts on nature 283.2 Enhance the use of clean energy,sustainable materials 30 andadvanced equipment and operating systems3.3 Improve the prevention and mitigation capacity against 32 pollution and invasive species3.4 Promote a circular economy and catalyse cross-sector 33 collabora
6、tion in regulation,finance and innovation3.5 Actively protect and restore nature 354 Get started 374.1 Align strategy with organizational maturity 384.2 A deeper look at metrics to support decision-making 404.3 Map the transition on to business functions 41Conclusion 44Appendix 45Contributors 46Endn