Dubai Telegraph - UN holds biodiversity talks on deal to stave off mass extinction

EUR -
AED 3.870573
AFN 71.062782
ALL 98.638665
AMD 424.212636
ANG 1.900543
AOA 962.642141
ARS 1066.699929
AUD 1.63605
AWG 1.896833
AZN 1.807139
BAM 1.963263
BBD 2.129194
BDT 126.010221
BGN 1.95858
BHD 0.397291
BIF 3050.739374
BMD 1.053796
BND 1.419681
BOB 7.2867
BRL 6.357386
BSD 1.054509
BTN 89.370589
BWP 14.4059
BYN 3.450493
BYR 20654.401287
BZD 2.12558
CAD 1.482143
CDF 3025.448712
CHF 0.930459
CLF 0.037251
CLP 1027.862453
CNY 7.655197
CNH 7.66518
COP 4652.899174
CRC 535.340165
CUC 1.053796
CUP 27.925594
CVE 110.648347
CZK 25.169178
DJF 187.280529
DKK 7.457619
DOP 63.702046
DZD 140.923788
EGP 52.483784
ERN 15.80694
ETB 131.988165
FJD 2.398387
FKP 0.831779
GBP 0.82857
GEL 3.003062
GGP 0.831779
GHS 15.933567
GIP 0.831779
GMD 74.819726
GNF 9094.259093
GTQ 8.140021
GYD 220.618677
HKD 8.20347
HNL 26.618565
HRK 7.517
HTG 138.166548
HUF 413.43895
IDR 16750.087166
ILS 3.816238
IMP 0.831779
INR 89.279492
IQD 1380.472739
IRR 44364.810754
ISK 145.507935
JEP 0.831779
JMD 165.996546
JOD 0.747248
JPY 158.208521
KES 136.454174
KGS 91.469913
KHR 4247.851911
KMF 492.781365
KPW 948.415986
KRW 1489.024078
KWD 0.324063
KYD 0.878749
KZT 554.101664
LAK 23130.822189
LBP 94420.119706
LKR 306.234143
LRD 188.629654
LSL 19.063456
LTL 3.111585
LVL 0.63743
LYD 5.152966
MAD 10.524783
MDL 19.308584
MGA 4947.571977
MKD 61.536517
MMK 3422.68825
MNT 3580.798697
MOP 8.455544
MRU 42.067925
MUR 49.181091
MVR 16.291982
MWK 1828.33617
MXN 21.362352
MYR 4.692023
MZN 67.347811
NAD 19.063036
NGN 1715.906556
NIO 38.727367
NOK 11.617231
NPR 142.992942
NZD 1.795713
OMR 0.405712
PAB 1.054509
PEN 3.939088
PGK 4.254702
PHP 61.298787
PKR 292.823561
PLN 4.279346
PYG 8227.275822
QAR 3.836843
RON 4.977181
RSD 116.958694
RUB 110.628131
RWF 1459.507438
SAR 3.959635
SBD 8.797673
SCR 14.719124
SDG 633.855401
SEK 11.49546
SGD 1.414513
SHP 0.831779
SLE 23.973542
SLL 22097.579878
SOS 602.24393
SRD 37.309633
STD 21811.449264
SVC 9.227077
SYP 2647.693874
SZL 19.063055
THB 36.060919
TJS 11.509955
TMT 3.688286
TND 3.320516
TOP 2.468096
TRY 36.595705
TTD 7.153261
TWD 34.14225
TZS 2771.483327
UAH 43.916506
UGX 3880.752602
USD 1.053796
UYU 45.533093
UZS 13525.47214
VES 50.352654
VND 26776.955954
VUV 125.108777
WST 2.941767
XAF 658.466395
XAG 0.033566
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.847936
XDR 0.801927
XOF 655.461172
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.817544
ZAR 19.081226
ZMK 9485.42613
ZMW 28.550534
ZWL 339.321877
  • RYCEF

    0.1100

    7.55

    +1.46%

  • RBGPF

    -1.0000

    61

    -1.64%

  • CMSC

    0.0360

    24.596

    +0.15%

  • NGG

    -0.7400

    62.23

    -1.19%

  • BCC

    -0.7100

    145.72

    -0.49%

  • SCS

    -0.0950

    13.425

    -0.71%

  • RIO

    -0.0750

    63.435

    -0.12%

  • AZN

    -1.5250

    66.525

    -2.29%

  • RELX

    0.4220

    47.902

    +0.88%

  • GSK

    -0.3650

    34.535

    -1.06%

  • VOD

    -0.0350

    8.795

    -0.4%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.46

    -0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.4850

    26.825

    -1.81%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    24.35

    +0.16%

  • BTI

    0.1550

    37.185

    +0.42%

  • BP

    -0.3650

    29.085

    -1.25%

UN holds biodiversity talks on deal to stave off mass extinction
UN holds biodiversity talks on deal to stave off mass extinction

UN holds biodiversity talks on deal to stave off mass extinction

Global efforts to cut plastic and agricultural pollution, protect a third of wild spaces, and ultimately live "in harmony with nature" will dominate UN biodiversity negotiations starting Monday, held in person after a two-year pandemic delay.

Text size:

Almost 200 countries are due to adopt a global framework this year to safeguard nature by mid-century from the destruction wrought by humanity, with a key milestone of 30 percent protected by 2030.

The aim is also to safeguard the "services" nature supplies: the air we breathe, the water we drink, the soil that yields the food we eat.

The meeting in Geneva will set the stage for a crucial UN biodiversity summit, initially due to be held in China in 2020 and postponed several times. It is now expected to take place at the end of August.

Geneva is a chance to strengthen a draft global biodiversity agreement "that many observers feel currently lacks the teeth needed to meaningfully address interconnected biodiversity and climate crises that cannot be solved in isolation", according to the Nature Conservancy.

Campaigners have for years called for a deal on halting biodiversity loss similar to what the Paris Agreement outlined for the climate.

Previous efforts to halt this devastation have fallen short, with countries failing, for example, to meet almost all the biodiversity targets set in 2010.

But despite often being overshadowed by the efforts to combat climate change, the plight of the natural world is no less catastrophic.

Intensive agriculture is depleting the soil and fouled waterways, oceans are overfished, plastics and other pollutants are invading ecosystems and threatening our health.

And now climate change is a growing threat that could compound all of these problems.

Last month, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned that nine percent of all the world's species will likely be "at high risk" of extinction even if warming is capped at the ambitious Paris target of 1.5 degrees Celsius.

In 2019, a report by UN biodiversity experts said one million species could disappear in the coming decades, raising fears that the world is entering its sixth era of mass extinction in the last half-billion years.

"We only know of about 10 percent of the species that exist on Earth. Some disappear without even having been described, nor ever seen by any human being," Anne Larigauderie, executive secretary of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), told AFP.

- Ambition -

The United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) is aiming to reverse that trend with its global framework.

This round of negotiations began in Rome in February 2020 and was swiftly brought to a halt by the Covid-19 pandemic, though online sessions continued and a draft text was finished in 2021.

It is hoped the in-person meeting in Geneva will move the process closer to a global deal at the UN's COP15 summit in China.

"Will we be able to settle everything? That's the big question," Basile van Havre, one of the two co-chairs of the negotiations, told AFP.

The draft outlines some twenty targets for 2030, including the high-profile ambition to protect at least 30 percent of the Earth's land and water habitats.

It also outlines objectives on reducing the amount of fertilisers and pesticides discharged into the environment and cutting at least $500 billion per year of subsidies harmful to Nature and ecosystems.

But as it stands, Guido Broekhoven of WWF said, the text is "not ambitious and comprehensive enough to address the current biodiversity crisis".

Observers will judge whether the mechanisms put in place -- such as monitoring and enforcement -- correspond to the targets set, said Sebastien Treyer, director general of the IDDRI think tank.

There will also be significant attention on the "mobilisation of financial resources", which are of particular importance to the Global South, he said.

Even the goal of the so-called High Ambition Coalition to protect 30 percent of the planet by 2030 might not be enough, observers said.

"If we do not tackle the indirect causes (of biodiversity loss), in particular production and consumption, there will always be strong erosion," said Juliette Landry, a researcher at IDDRI.

D.Al-Nuaimi--DT