China Daily

UN urges quicker action on biodiversi­ty conservati­on

- By EDITH MUTETHYA in Nairobi, Kenya edithmutet­hya@chinadaily.com.cn

Experts and leaders on the sidelines of the sixth session of the United Nations Environmen­t Assembly on Wednesday called for accelerati­on of the national biodiversi­ty conservati­on strategies and action plans that were made at the UN Biodiversi­ty conference — COP15.

During a meeting held in December 2022 in Montreal, Canada, the landmark Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversi­ty Framework was adopted as a guide to global action for the conservati­on of global biodiversi­ty through 2030. China holds the COP15 presidency.

Speaking at a side event which was aimed at evaluating the framework’s implementa­tion progress, Huang Runqiu, the Chinese minister of ecology and environmen­t, said the framework implementa­tion is an open and inclusive idea.

“We hope to create vitality with other existing trajectory processes and initiative­s to jointly promote the comprehens­ive implementa­tion of the Kunming framework,” he said.

Huang pointed to the fact that China has invested 1.5 billion yuan ($208.5 million) to establish the Kunming Biodiversi­ty Fund to support the conservati­on of biodiversi­ty in developing countries.

He said in cooperatio­n with the United Nations Environmen­t Programme, or UNEP, and other institutio­ns, China is in the process of establishi­ng the fund secretaria­t, the fund management system as well as exploring fund project reserves and studying project implementa­tion models.

“This year, the Chinese government has arranged 50 million yuan as the startup capital of the Kunming Fund, so the first batch of projects may be implemente­d before COP16,” Huang said.

“We welcome countries and institutio­ns to donate to the Fund,” he said, adding only multilater­alism actions can address the global challenge of loss of biodiversi­ty.

Inger Andersen, executive director of the United Nations Environmen­t Programme, said implementi­ng Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversi­ty Framework is a major priority.

“We know what we have to do and we have clear targets about how we have to do it. We all made commitment­s and promises to one another to get it done,” she said.

Triple planetary crisis

Andersen said it’s clear that biodiversi­ty is declining due to unsustaina­ble consumptio­n and production, in addition to biodiversi­ty being linked to the triple planetary crisis of climate change, natural biodiversi­ty loss, as well as pollution and waste.

“Biodiversi­ty is us and how we live and interact with nature, so nature-focused climate actions can bring huge benefits and nature-positive actions,” she said.

According to the World Economic Forum analysis, “natureposi­tive” solutions can create 395 million jobs by 2030.

David Cooper, the acting executive secretary of the Secretaria­t of the Convention on Biological Diversity, said challenges to translatin­g the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversi­ty Framework agreement remain.

“It is going to take a lot of work to achieve the goals and the targets, but we know it’s necessary if we are going to leave a livable planet for our children,” he said.

“We are very grateful to China for launching the action initiative. This initiative will build on other initiative­s and provide a common platform for these actions, increase visibility to the framework and give momentum for its implementa­tion.”

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