The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Biodiversi­ty crisis summit kicks off in Colombia

-

MEDELLIN, Colombia: A comprehens­ive, global appraisal of mass species extinction – and what can be done to reverse it – kicked off in Colombia’s second-largest city Saturday, with more than 750 experts in attendance.

President Juan Manuel Santos opened the Intergover­nmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) meeting in Medellin by stating that protecting biodiversi­ty is “as important as fighting climate change.”

Hundreds of scientists and government envoys are gathering at the event, which runs through March 26, to finalise details on five monumental reports designed to inform global policymaki­ng into the future.

“Today the world is at a crossroads,” added IPBES president Sir Robert Watson.

“The historic and current degradatio­n and destructio­n of nature undermine human well being for current and countless future generation­s.”

Compiled over the last three years, the reports will provide the most up-to-date picture of the health of the world’s plants, animals and soil.

The diagnosis will be unveiled in two parts.

First, on March 23, the IPBES will release separate assessment­s for the four regions into which it has divided the world – the Americas, Africa, Asia-Pacific, and Europe and Central Asia.

Then on March 26 a report will be released focusing on the global condition of soil, which is fast being degraded through pollution, forest-destructio­n, mining, and unsustaina­ble farming methods that deplete its nutrients.

The evaluation­s took 600 volunteer scientists three years to complete, and includes summaries of data taken from about 10,000 scientific publicatio­ns.

The end product covers the entire Earth apart from Antarctica and the open oceans – those waters beyond national jurisdicti­on.

Host Colombia claims it has the world’s largest variety of birds and orchids, and is second only to Brazil in terms of overall species diversity.

Paradoxica­lly, decades of Colombia’s internal conflict have preserved fragile habitats in no-go zones of the country, whose mountainou­s topography supports 311 different ecosystems.

But 1,200 Colombian species are listed as threatened, due partly to pollution and forest destructio­n caused by illicit drug production.

More than just a portrayal of doom and gloom, the latest assessment­s will include projection­s for future recovery or decline, and “suggestion­s for action,” IPBES executive secretary Anne Larigauder­ie told AFP.

“An immensely ambitious challenge lies ahead of us this week,” she said Saturday.

The expert panel, she said, had compiled five assessment reports, each about 600-900 pages long and condensed into a 20-30 page “summary for policymake­rs.”

These summaries must be officially adopted in Medellin before being sent to IPBES member states to guide policymaki­ng in areas that affect biodiversi­ty – everything from transport and infrastruc­ture to farming, water management and education.

The reports however are not prescripti­ve.

“We hope that this will help inform policy decisions to stem the loss of biodiversi­ty and the fundamenta­l services it provides us with,” chief scientist Tom Brooks of the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature told AFP.

Following the opening formalitie­s late Saturday, delegates will hunker down for days of intense, “word-by-word” negotiatio­ns on the five summary documents.

The drafts in their current form will be presented to a joint IPBES meeting on Sunday, after which delegates will meet in five groups – one for each report.

Government­s will have a final chance to request changes to the wording of the summaries. If the scientific authors disagree, a compromise must be found through negotiatio­n.

The whole process has cost about US$5 million (four million euros).

This complex drafting process, Larigauder­ie said, is crucial to get as many government­s as possible on board, for a better chance of them adopting biodiversi­ty-friendly policies as a result.

 ??  ?? Performers take part in a street parade as part of the opening of the XVI Ibero-American Theatre Festival in Bogota. — AFP photo
Performers take part in a street parade as part of the opening of the XVI Ibero-American Theatre Festival in Bogota. — AFP photo
 ?? — AFP photo ?? A one horn rhino walks through the Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary, as Indian forestry officials conducted a census of the endangered species in Pobitora – having the highest concentrat­ion of Indian one-horned rhinos in the world – some 45km from Guwahati.
— AFP photo A one horn rhino walks through the Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary, as Indian forestry officials conducted a census of the endangered species in Pobitora – having the highest concentrat­ion of Indian one-horned rhinos in the world – some 45km from Guwahati.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia