In 2026, Earth Overshoot Day, the date by which humanity will have consumed more from nature than the planet can regenerate in a year, was calculated to fall on July 30. In this piece I argue that the driver behind this isn’t greed or indifference, but the way we innovate, and that closing the gap starts at the design stage, where most of a product’s environmental footprint is determined. 

The article introduces RISE, a framework built on two decades of cross-sector research and advisory work, for innovating with nature rather than against it.

I also present how AI is beginning to close a long-standing gap between ecological and business thinking, helping organizations translate biodiversity data into decisions boardrooms can act on, accelerating direct conservation work through tools like species-recognition AI, and pointing toward models of prosperity that don’t depend on ever-greater resource consumption.

A few ideas explored in the piece:

  • Why most innovation strategies still treat nature as a cost to manage rather than a source of value to create, and why up to 90% of a product’s environmental footprint is locked in at the design stage
  • The four pillars of RISE: Reduce resource extraction, Integrate circularity, Systemize lifecycle thinking, and Emulate and Enrich ecosystems
  • Three concrete ways AI is closing the gap between ecological and business thinking: biodiversity-data integration for boardroom decisions, AI-powered conservation monitoring, and decoupling prosperity from resource and demographic growth
  • Why the competitive window for nature-positive innovation is open now, but won’t stay open indefinitely

Click here to read the full article on the website of  Inc Arabia.

See the article in the digital edition of Inc. Arabia Magazine here, June 2026 issue, on page 56.

Click here to download the PDF version.

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