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WorldCOP15: Summit on 'pact with nature' enters final stages

Date:

COP15: Summit on ‘pact with nature’ enters final stages

Delegates at a UN summit are debating a new draft agreement as there are only hours left to secure a global agreement to stop the destruction of nature.

A compromise text has been proposed in a last-ditch effort to forge agreement among close to 200 nations.

The UN summit on biodiversity in Montreal is viewed as a “last chance” to restart nature.

The degree of ambition and the best way to finance the plans, however, have caused severe disagreements.

One big sticking point has been over how to fund conservation efforts in the parts of the globe that harbour some of the world’s most outstanding biodiversity.

Biodiversity refers to all the Earth’s living things and the way they are connected in a complex web of life that sustains the planet.

Lady bird
IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Biodiversity includes all living things, big and small, and the way they fit together in a web of life

A new text of the agreement was released on Sunday by China, the official president of the summit, which is also known as COP 15. It had to be moved to Canadian soil due to Covid restrictions in China.

The text has been passed to ministers who are expected to discuss the proposals behind closed doors. Environmental groups said these were nervous hours.

“We cannot afford a roll back on ambition; addressing the biodiversity crisis cannot wait – nature will not wait,” said Dr Amy McDougall of BirdLife International.

The document has strong language around ensuring the rights of indigenous peoples are protected and addresses the question of finance with proposals to boost the flow of international finance to developing countries.

Cop 15 president, Montreal
IMAGE SOURCE,IISD MIKE MUZURAKIS Image caption, On Saturday, ministers considered progress made on the proposals

“It has a lot of really positive elements and if governments truly implement it nature will be better off by 2030 than it is now,” said Sue Lieberman of the Wildlife Conservation Society.

However, there has been criticism over a lack of focus on oceans in the agreement being negotiated, with questions over how much of the world’s oceans are included in a target to protect 30% of the planet by 2030. And some have raised concerns about the strength of targets for reducing extinctions of plants and animals.

Tony Juniper, head of the government’s advising body for nature in England, tweeted that the new plans were too weak, saying calls for ambition on finance must be matched by stronger ambition for nature recovery.

On Saturday, ministers made impassioned speeches about the need to agree on clear goals to put nature on a path to recovery by the end of the decade.

“Nature is our ship. We must ensure it stays afloat,” said EU Commissioner for Environment, Oceans and Fisheries, Virginijus Sinkevicius.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

Colombia’s environment minister, Susana Muhamed, drew applause when she called for ambition in protecting the planet for the good of all. “Nature does not have boundaries,” she said.

Countries have been meeting in Montreal, Canada, in what is billed a “last chance” to agree a plan that will halt and reverse the loss of biodiversity.

Scientists have warned that with forests and grasslands being lost at unprecedented rates and oceans under pressure from pollution, humans are pushing the Earth beyond safe limits.

This includes increasing the risk of diseases, like SARs CoV-2, Ebola and HIV, spilling over from wild animals into human populations.

A key sticking point has been finance. In echoes of the climate summit, COP 27, in Egypt, some countries have been calling for a new fund to be set up to help preserve biodiversity, but this was rejected by others.

The draft biodiversity framework includes four broad goals around protecting nature and sharing its benefits.

It also includes 22 targets ranging from the sustainable use and management of wildlife to the restoration of destroyed habitats and using fewer plastics and pesticides.

Source: BBC.com 

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