CIB Conferences
Abstract
The development of renewable energy projects, while essential for mitigating climate change, poses significant challenges to biodiversity conservation due to habitat loss, fragmentation, and species displacement. Aligning these projects with global sustainability goals, such as SDG 15, requires addressing the often-overlooked gap between biodiversity commitments and actual impacts.
To tackle this challenge, a conceptual framework is proposed in this study that illustrates the relationship between biodiversity commitments and impacts through four hierarchical levels. The framework distinguishes between predicted and actual impacts, as well as compliance-driven and proactive commitments. It incorporates alternative data sources, such as compliance documents, ESG reports, and social media, and emphasizes the transformation cycle through which commitments are translated into actions, highlighting gaps that may emerge during implementation.
A preliminary application of this framework was conducted using five large-scale wind energy projects in Australia. Methodologies included large language models (LLMs) for analyzing biodiversity commitments and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) for assessing biodiversity impacts. This combined approach offers a novel integration of qualitative and quantitative methods to evaluate commitment-impact alignment.
Findings indicate a general alignment between commitments and biodiversity impacts across the projects, as visualized in a Commitment-Impact Matrix. While commitments were proportional to observed impacts, limitations in data scope—such as the exclusion of proactive commitments—underline the need for more comprehensive analyses. These results suggest the potential for enhancing biodiversity conservation by improving the operationalization and monitoring of commitments.
This study contributes a replicable framework for analyzing the commitment-impact gap, integrating advanced technologies, and providing actionable insights for project developers and policymakers. It lays the groundwork for future research to better align renewable energy projects with global biodiversity goals, advancing both theoretical understanding and practical application.
The paper will be presented:
In-person
Primary U.N. Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)
Life on Land - - Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage, combat desertification, and halt and forests reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss
Secondary U.N. Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)
Affordable and Clean Energy - - Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all
Primary CIB Task Group OR Working commission
W065 – Organisation and Management of Construction
Secondary CIB Task Group OR Working commission
TG91 – Infrastructure
Recommended Citation
Xu, Xinyi and Xue, Jin
(2025)
"Bridging Conflicting Sustainable Goals: AI-Empowered Analysis of Biodiversity Commitments and Impacts in Renewable Energy Projects,"
CIB Conferences: Vol. 1
Article 105.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.7771/3067-4883.2038