Stabroek News

Global biodiversi­ty deal to halt nature loss stalls in Nairobi

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NAIROBI, (Reuters) - Efforts to draft an ambitious global agreement on halting nature loss ended yesterday with little progress made in the Nairobi negotiatio­ns, leaving limited time for brokering a biodiversi­ty pact this year.

About 1,000 negotiator­s from 150 countries were supposed to finalize a new draft agreement on protecting nature and wildlife, which would then be considered for adoption at the next U.N. Biodiversi­ty summit, known as “COP15”, in December in Montreal, Canada.

But by Sunday’s closing, the wording for only two of more than 20 goals had been agreed, with much of the draft document still riddled with brackets - signaling lack of consensus. Those two goals address the sharing of knowledge and technology, and promotion of urban green spaces.

“There is a significan­t amount of work in front of us … a lot more than what we thought,” said meeting co-chair Basile van Havre, of Canada’s environmen­t ministry.

Some environmen­tal groups said they thought some delegation­s were becoming less ambitious from meeting to meeting.

“Previous proposals have (since) been weakened; commitment­s are being made more vague and pushed down the road to 2050 instead of 2030,” said Guido Broekhoven, head of policy at World Wildlife Fund Internatio­nal.

Parties were still debating, for example, whether the agreement should address pesticide use. Meanwhile, delegates had removed all mention of infrastruc­ture, such as roads, threatenin­g wildlife, Broekhoven said.

Observers worried that the lack of progress in Nairobi would spell failure in Montreal.

“We cannot afford to fail,” said Elizabeth Maruma Mrema, executive secretary of the U.N. Convention on Biological Diversity.

Organizers said they would seek to schedule yet another round of talks before the Montreal summit. The Nairobi talks had been organized quickly, after March talks in Geneva failed to make much progress on the draft.

The decision to hold COP15 in Montreal was announced last week, after the Chinese hosts postponed the summit four times due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

While China will continue to hold the summit presidency, some observers said they hoped the change of venue would boost opportunit­ies for public engagement and participat­ion by civil society and non-profit groups. China, for example, does not allow for mass demonstrat­ions.

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