
Organisations throughout the UK own or manage vast amounts of land.
Eighty-one companies own or manage 65,800 hectares of SSSI land in
England, 6 per cent of the total SSSI land in England (source English
Nature December 2003). The impact these organisations and organisations
managing any land can have on biodiversity is tremendous. The
Biodiversity Benchmark was established to engage with these
organisations to encourage better land management practices.
The Biodiversity Benchmark is the first recognised scheme to award continual biodiversity improvement of land. The Benchmark is flexible and adaptable, so that it can be applied to any organisation managing land, from businesses through to local authorities, service utilities, NHS, developers and charities.
Similar to other standards for management systems (such as ISO 14001), the Biodiversity Benchmark is composed of a set of detailed requirements to which an organisation must be able to demonstrate that it meets. The Benchmark integrates biodiversity into an organisation and improve biodiversity improvement as a result.
The organisation completes a self-assessment form to demonstrate performance in relation to the Biodiversity Benchmark requirements. This is followed by initial assessment/visit(s) by a trained independent assessor who examines documents (the biodiversity management system), talks to staff involved and assesses the landholding/s to be benchmarked. The assessor highlights and raises any issued to be addressed by the organisation. Once the organisation believes these issues have been addressed, the assessor will then return to conduct a main assessment. The assessor’s recommendations are checked and confirmed by a Quality Assurance Auditor before a Biodiversity Benchmark is awarded and becomes subject to annual external assessments.
For more information please visit www.biodiversitybenchmark.org