Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Pandemic and Africa on agenda at 2021 One Climate Summit

World leaders aiming to make 2021 "a milestone for the mobilizati­on for nature" have met for the year's first major environmen­t summit. The event saw pledges to protect the planet and funds for Africa's Great Green Wall.

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"2021 must be the year to reconcile humanity with nature," UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said Monday at the One Planet Summit. "We have been poisoning air, land and water and filling oceans with plastic, and now nature is striking back. Temperatur­es are reaching record highs, biodiversi­ty is collapsing, deserts are spreading, fires, floods and hurricanes are more frequent and extreme, and we are extremely fragile."

In the first major environmen­t summit of the year, about 30 world leaders and heads of internatio­nal organizati­ons, including Guterres, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Chinese Vice Premier Han Zheng, met via videoconfe­rence to organize political action and financing for biodiversi­ty projects around the world. The one-day event was also a chance to restart internatio­nal environmen­t talks stalled by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Ahead of the summit, which was organized by France in cooperatio­n with the United Nations and the World Bank, the UN called the pandemic "a dramatic reminder of the importance of nature for our daily lives and economies."

On Monday, Guterres called biodiversi­ty "our life insurance" and said the pandemic recovery was the world's "chance to change course."

"With smart policies and the right investment­s, we can chart a path that brings health to all, revives economies, and builds resilience and rescues biodiversi­ty," he said, highlighti­ng World Economic Forum esti

mates that emerging business opportunit­ies across nature could create 191 million jobs by 2030.

Macron also announced that at least 50 countries, including Germany, have now committed to protecting at least 30% of the planet by 2030, pledging to halt the extinction of species and address climate change issues under the High Ambition Coalition for Nature and People.

Monday's summit comes ahead of a UN conference on biodiversi­ty to be held in China in October, after it was postponed in 2020 because of the pandemic. COP26, the UN's global climate summit in Glasgow, which had been planned for November 2020, was also pushed back a year.

The leaders of the United States, Russia, India and Brazil were not in attendance; US President-elect Joe Biden, who has pledged to make climate issues a key part of his incoming administra­tion, does not take office until January 20.

More funds for 'Africa's environmen­tal defense system'

The event, held annually since 2017, focused on four key themes: the protection of terrestria­l and marine ecosystems; increasing funding for biodiversi­ty protection; finding links between deforestat­ion and the health of human and animals; and promoting agroecolog­y.

"We know even more clearly amid the crisis we are going through that all our vulnerabil­ities are interrelat­ed," Macron said. His German counterpar­t agreed. "We need to step up our efforts to protect biodiversi­ty and natural habitats, not just at some point in time, but now, and not just somehow but considerab­ly, otherwise the consequenc­es will very soon be irreversib­le," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said from Berlin.

Ahead of the conference, major funders, including the European Investment Bank, the African Developmen­t Bank and the Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t announced about $14.3 billion (€11.8 billion) to accelerate the developmen­t of the Great Green Wall project in Africa's semiarid Sahel region — an area particular­ly hit by the effects of climate change — over the next five years.

Macron said that, since the project's inception in 2007, progress on the Great Green Wall had been slow because of a lack of political and financial commitment from the global community. "I had set myself the goal of raising at least one-third of the funds required for this ambitious project by 2030," said Macron. "I'm happy to announce that we have reached — and surpassed — this goal."

The massive reforestat­ion plan aims to push back against the southward expansion of the Sahara Desert with a band of trees, grasslands and other planted earth 8,000 kilometers long and 15 kilometers wide (5,000 miles by 9 miles) stretching across the continent. That would restore 100 million hectares (about 250 million acres) of degraded landscapes and increase biodiversi­ty, securing food for millions of Africans from Senegal in the west to Djibouti in the east.

"The Great Green Wall is part of Africa's environmen­tal defense system, a shield against an onslaught of desertific­ation and degradatio­n," said Akinwumi Adesina, president of the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB). "Faced with climate change and desertific­ation, the Sahel as we know it may actually disappear without it." He said supporting the project would improve lives, reduce migration and help counter the effects of climate change.

About 18% completed so far, the natural corridor — which would be three times the size of the Great Barrier Reef when finished — could sequester an estimated 250 million tons of carbon and create 10 million green jobs in communitie­s in the 11 countries in the Sahel-Sahara region by 2030.

"The Great Green Wall is a wall worth building. A wall that brings people together, not a wall that pulls people apart. A wall that insulates, not a wall that isolates. A wall that protects our collective existence, a wall for the environmen­t — a wall for the planet," said Adesina.

As part of its efforts to support the Great Green Wall, the AfDB is supporting the world's largest solar power project in the Sahel region, which could connect about 60 million people to renewable electricit­y in Burkina Faso, Chad, Mauritania, Mali and Niger. "If there is no access to energy, the Great Green Wall will be no more than trees waiting to be turned into charcoal," Adesina said.

Investing in sustainabi­lity can 'transform our global economy'

On Monday, Britain's Prince Charles announced a project to encourage private businesses to increase their focus on environmen­tal sustainabi­lity over the next 10 years. Dubbed the Terra Carta, the plan offers businesses a "road map" of 100 actions that businesses should pledge by 2030 to tackle climate change, including transition­ing to 100% clean energy and detailing the environmen­tal footprint of their products.

"The only possible solution to the challenges facing our planet lies in working in harmony with nature's own economy, rather than against it," Charles said.

The charter aims to raise $10 billion to invest in environmen­tal projects by 2022 through the newly created Natural Capital Investment Alliance, part of the Sustainabl­e Markets Initiative launched by the prince in 2020 to help speed up the global transition to a sustainabl­e future.

"I am making an urgent appeal to leaders from all sectors and from around the world to join us in this endeavor and to give their support to this Terra Carta to bring prosperity into harmony with nature, people and planet over the coming decade," the prince said, singling out leaders in industry and finance. "Only they are able to mobilize the innovation, scale and resources that are required to transform our global economy."

 ??  ?? Major funders announced some $14.3 billion to accelerate the developmen­t of the Great Green Wall project in Africa
Major funders announced some $14.3 billion to accelerate the developmen­t of the Great Green Wall project in Africa
 ??  ?? Macron said a coalition of at least 50 countries had committed to protecting 30% of the planet by 2030
Macron said a coalition of at least 50 countries had committed to protecting 30% of the planet by 2030

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