
USCIB event on the biodiversity and climate change policy nexus. L-R: Agnes Vinblad (USCIB), Alejandra Castro (Bayer), Carolyn Kissane (NYU), Glenn Hodes (UNDESA)
USCIB represents member companies across key international fora related to biodiversity and nature impact policy. As an official observer to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (“UN Biodiversity” or “CBD”), USCIB actively represents multisectoral US business interests at the biannual UN Biodiversity Conference of the Parties (COP’s) and the technical intersessional meetings of the UN Biodiversity subsidiary bodies, advocating constructive outcomes that strengthen US business competitiveness while advancing environmental protection.
We convene member meetings to discuss trends and developments across the biodiversity policy landscape, and develop US business positions on topics such as biodiversity and pollution, corporate disclosure requirements, and nature finance.
What’s at Stake for US Business
While the US government is not a Party to the CBD, the Convention is a multilateral treaty with near-universal participation with 196 Parties. Decisions reached at the CBD shape global rules across key markets for US business, with American companies facing wide-reaching, indirect impacts through foreign regulations, investor expectations, procurement standards, and biodiversity reporting requirements that affect operations, finance, market access, reputational risk, and long-term resource security.
Key Issues include:
- Corporate reporting requirements on biodiversity and related nature risks and impacts.
- Biodiversity finance and increasing pressures on mobilizing private sector funding for nature.
- Access and Benefit-Sharing (ABS) of genetic resources.
- Digital Sequence Information (DSI), also known as digital genetic data, with a focus on the CBD-established, multilateral benefit-sharing mechanism, “the Cali Fund”.
- Emerging issues on the biodiversity and pollution nexus with a focus on the impacts of chemicals and plastics on biodiversity.
- Synergies across climate, biodiversity, and land-use policies.

USCIB’s Agnes Vinblad at UN CBD SBSTTA-27 in Panama City, Panama.
USCIB Actions
- Represent members at technical meetings of the UN Biodiversity Subsidiary Bodies, ensuring that US business interests are considered when decisions are made.
- USCIB members are actively participating in the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and ICC’s Access and Benefit-Sharing Taskforce, contributing to shaping the global business position on access and benefit-sharing of genetic resources, and regulatory considerations related to digital genetic data.
- USCIB will send a multisectoral US business delegation to UN Biodiversity COP17 in Armenia, showcasing US business solutions, while serving as a resource for governments to learn private sector perspectives on policy decisions that drives economic growth while safeguarding environmental protections.
- Represent members at technical expert exchanges on discussions related to Rio Convention Synergies, advancing US business priorities on strengthening policy coherence across climate, biodiversity, and land-use.
| Meeting | Location | Dates |
| 6th session of the UN CBD Subsidiary Body on Implementation (SBI-6) | Rome, Italy | February 16-19, 2026 |
| UN CBD Technical Expert Exchange – Synergies across climate, biodiversity and land-use policies | Vilm, Germany | June 2-5, 2026 |
| 28th session of the UN CBD Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice (SBSTTA-28) | Nairobi, Kenya | July 27 - August 1, 2026 |
| 7th session of the UN CBD Subsidiary Body on Implementation (SBI-7) | Nairobi, Kenya | August 4 - 12, 2026 |
| 17th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the UN CBD (UN Biodiversity COP17) | Yerevan, Armenia | October 19-30, 22026 |
Chair
Liane Grieco
Director, Global Biodiversity Strategy & Programs
IFF
Staff
Agnes Vinblad
Senior Director, Environment and Sustainable Development
avinblad@uscib.org
