Climate protection has CO₂ equivalents. Nature has – nothing comparable. This asymmetry has dramatic consequences:
Investments in nature today pay for activities, not outcomes. Forests are planted, but no one measures whether the ecosystem actually recovers. Without transparent impact evidence, every nature investment remains subject to greenwashing accusations.
There are over 300 biodiversity indicators in Europe. Each initiative, each standard, each software solution develops its own measurement logic. The result: The more actors enter the market, the greater the fragmentation – and the further away the goal of shared quality.
Modern technologies can precisely capture risks. But they rarely translate them into concrete, site-specific actions. "Your forest has a problem" is not a decision – "Here are three options for that site" is.
"The next frontier for nature tech isn't identifying risk — it's telling us what to do about it." – Eric Wilburn, Industry Expert
The energy transition shows how it works: First infrastructure creates trust and a market. Nature needs a similar development – a Nature Intelligence Infrastructure (NII) built on two pillars:
An open, neutral framework where measurement logic is operationalized based on Ecosystem Condition (EC). This includes:
A network of Living Labs where methods, indicators, and decision models are tested under real conditions:
The interplay: Standards don't emerge in isolation – they're tested in practice. And practice provides the foundation for shared measurement.
The EU Nature Restoration Regulation creates for the first time a binding, scientifically founded measurement basis for all of Europe. Ecosystem Condition captures natural ecosystems through four core dimensions.
This is a historic opportunity: 450 million Europeans receive a common framework for nature investments.
A central principle of NII is efficiency through shared data usage:
One quality-assured measurement serves multiple purposes:
This reduces costs, increases comparability, and builds trust across sectors.
When infrastructure works, a self-reinforcing positive cycle emerges:
"Living labs enable societal innovation learning – and without that, transformation will not succeed." – Maja Göpel
The Future Forest Initiative (FFI) is an independent innovation hub at the intersection of forestry practice, science, and technology. From Blankenburg Castle in Germany's Harz region, FFI connects actors who understand nature as a central prerequisite for social and economic resilience.
FFI sees itself not as owner of this infrastructure, but as a neutral facilitator building a European network together with partners – practice-oriented, open, and interoperable.
The development of a Nature Intelligence Infrastructure requires diverse perspectives. FFI invites policymakers, businesses, investors, technology providers, land users, and interested stakeholders to actively shape this development.
Only through the interplay of many actors do individual projects become reliable structure – and scattered data becomes a system that supports decisions.
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