30% of the World Land and Oceans to be Protect by 2030, Vows CBD
Meet in Canada
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The deal lays out a suite of 23 environmental
targets. The most prominent, known as 30x30, would place 30 percent of land and
sea under protection. Currently, about 17 percent of the planet’s land and roughly
8 percent of its oceans are protected, with restrictions on activities like fishing,
farming and mining.
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President Biden has signed an executive order
that would similarly place 30 percent of United States land and waters under protection
·
Convention on Biological Diversity, the United
Nations treaty that underpins the old agreement and the new one reached here on
Monday.
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biodiversity loss, humans are behind each one.
On land, the biggest driver is agriculture.
·
Other factors include hunting, mining, logging,
climate change, pollution and invasive species. The agreement aims to address these
drivers. Target 17, for example, commits to reducing the overall risk from pesticides
and highly toxic chemicals by at least half.
·
How to balance the deal’s ambition with the ability
of countries to pay for it generated sharp disagreements at the talks, along with
demands to create a new global biodiversity fund. China, which led the talks, and
Canada, which hosted, worked to strike a delicate middle ground.
·
The deal reached on Monday would roughly double
overall biodiversity financing to $200 billion a year from all sources
·
It earmarks up to $30 billion per year to flow
to poor countries from wealthy nations.
·
The Paulson Institute, a research organization,
found that reversing biodiversity decline by 2030 would require closing a financing
gap of about $700 billion per year.
Roughly 190 countries
early on Monday approved a sweeping United Nations agreement to protect 30 percent
of the planet’s land and oceans by 2030 and to take a slew of other measures against
biodiversity loss, a mounting under-the-radar crisis that, if left unchecked, jeopardizes
the planet’s food and water supplies as well as the existence of untold species
around the world.
The agreement comes as
biodiversity is declining worldwide at rates never seen before in human history.
Researchers have projected that a million plants and animals are at risk of extinction,
many within decades. The last extinction event of that magnitude was the one that
killed off the dinosaurs 65 million years ago.
While many scientists
and activists had pushed for even stronger measures, the deal, which includes monitoring
mechanisms that previous agreements had lacked, clearly signals increasing momentum
around the issue.
“This is a huge moment
for nature,” Brian O’Donnell, director of the Campaign for Nature, a coalition of
groups pushing for protections, said about the agreement. “This is a scale of conservation
that we haven’t seen ever attempted before.”
The United States is just
one of two countries in the world that are not party to the Convention on Biological
Diversity, largely because Republicans, who are typically opposed to joining treaties,
have blocked United States membership. That means the American delegation was required
to participate from the sidelines. (The only other country
that has not joined the treaty is the Holy See.)
President
Biden has signed an executive order that would similarly place 30 percent of United
States land and waters under protection, but any legislative efforts
to support that goal are expected to face strong opposition when Republicans take
control of the House in January.
Countries also agreed
to manage the remaining 70 percent of the planet to avoid losing areas of high importance
to biodiversity and to ensure that big businesses disclose biodiversity risks and
impacts from their operations.
Now, the question is whether
the deal’s lofty targets will be realized.
A previous 10-year agreement
failed to fully achieve a single target at the global level, according to the body
that oversees the Convention on Biological Diversity, the
United Nations treaty that underpins the old agreement and the new one reached here
on Monday. But negotiators said they had learned from their mistakes, and the
new pact includes provisions to make targets measurable and to monitor countries’
progress.
“Now you can have a report
card,” said Basile van Havre, a Canadian who was a co-chairman of the negotiations.
“Money, monitoring and targets” would make the difference this time, he said.
While there are multiple
causes of biodiversity loss, humans are behind each one.
On land, the biggest driver is agriculture. At sea, it’s overfishing. Other factors include hunting, mining, logging, climate change, pollution and invasive species.
The
agreement aims to address these drivers. Target 17, for example, commits to reducing
the overall risk from pesticides and highly toxic chemicals by at least half, while
also addressing fertilizer runoff.
Conservation groups had
pushed for stronger measures related to extinctions and wildlife populations.
Anne Larigauderie, an ecologist and the executive secretary of the
intergovernmental scientific platform on biodiversity, known as IPBES, regretted
that omission but praised the overall agreement as ambitious and quantified.
“It’s a compromise, but
it’s not a bad one,” Dr. Larigauderie
said.
The European Union had
sought more forceful conservation targets. Indonesia wanted more leeway on how it
used nature.
An outsize amount of the
world’s biodiversity lives in countries of the global south. But these nations often
lack the hefty financial resources needed to restore ecosystems, to reform harmful
agriculture, aquaculture, fisheries and forestry practices; and to conserve threatened
species.
Developing countries pushed
hard for more funding, with representatives of dozens of countries from Latin American,
Africa and Southeast Asia walking out of meetings on Wednesday in protest that they
weren’t being heard.
The Democratic Republic
of Congo expressed fierce opposition and held up final approval into the early hours
of Monday morning. When the president of the talks proceeded over the Congolese
objections, delegates from several African spoke out in protest.
The deal
reached on Monday would roughly double overall biodiversity financing to $200 billion
a year from all sources: governments, the private sector and philanthropy.
It earmarks up to $30 billion per year to flow to poor countries
from wealthy nations. The financial commitments are not legally binding.
Representatives of developing
countries said that money should not be seen as charity.
Joseph Onoja, a biologist who directs the Nigerian Conservation Foundation,
noted that the former colonial powers had grown rich by exploiting natural resources
all over the world. “They came around and plundered our resources to develop themselves,”
he said.
Now that developing countries
are trying to use natural resources for their own growth, he said, they’re being
told they must preserve them in the name of global conservation.
Dr. Onoja, a conservation biologist, said he believed in protecting
nature but wanted industrialized countries to be held accountable for past actions.
A major source of funding
could come from reallocating the hundreds of billions or more per year currently
spent on subsidies that harm nature, such as certain agricultural practices and
fossil fuels. Target 18 has the world reducing those by at least $500 billion per
year by 2030.
Indigenous rights have
been a point of contention around the 30x30 idea. Some feared that the measure could
cause communities to be displaced, while others championed the target as a means
to secure Indigenous land rights and called for an even higher percentage of land
to be placed under protection.
Jennifer Corpuz, a representative of the International Indigenous Forum
on Biodiversity and managing director of policy at Nia Tero,
a nonprofit group, celebrated the inclusion of language
about Indigenous rights in the agreement. “It’s groundbreaking,”
she said.
Maisa Rojas Corradi, Chile’s environment minister and a climate scientist,
said she hadn’t grasped the depth of the biodiversity crisis until a major intergovernmental
report on the topic in 2019. Returning home, she said, her plan is to bring other
ministers on board. While conceding that agriculture issues are especially tricky
right now because of food security issues triggered by the Russian invasion of Ukraine,
she said it was important to press ahead.
“We have to understand
that there will be no food on the planet with no biodiversity.”