Arab News

World’s spiral of climate woe

- RANVIR S. NAYAR Ranvir S. Nayar is managing editor of Media India Group. For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion

While the global focus remains on greenhouse gas emissions and climate change, there is far less awareness about yet another danger staring humanity and the planet in the face: Biodiversi­ty loss. According to a report released last month by the World Wide Fund for Nature, there has been a 69 percent average decline in the wildlife population­s of mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish across the globe in the last 50 years.

At a UN biodiversi­ty meeting in 2010, a report warned that the world was losing its wildlife at a rapid clip of 2.5 percent every year. The final resolution at the meeting called for ending the decline in wildlife population­s entirely by 2020. More than 12 years later, the UN Biodiversi­ty Conference begins again in Montreal next month and reports say that the world is still losing its wildlife at the same rate of 2.5 percent per year. This shows that absolutely nothing has been done, even though almost all the wildlife and biodiversi­ty loss is due to human actions and is hence within our control. The main causes are habitat loss, the introducti­on of invasive species and pollution. Of late, a new cause — also mainly due to human activities — has entered the scenario: Climate change. With extreme droughts, flash floods, severe heat and cold waves becoming commonplac­e all over the world, the rate of loss of biodiversi­ty in its entirety and not just in wildlife population­s is increasing.

While climate change is destroying biodiversi­ty, the loss of plant and animal life also exacerbate­s the impacts of climate change. For instance, due to erosion and rising warm waters — and of course due to human greed — the world is rapidly losing its remaining few mangroves. But mangroves play a crucial role in acting as effective barriers against rising sea levels and slow down the waves, curbing erosion in coastal areas and preventing flooding during high tides or extreme weather events. Despite dozens of meetings and hundreds of declaratio­ns, global leaders have singularly failed to address either climate change or biodiversi­ty loss and this has propelled the Earth into a vicious downward spiral toward catastroph­e, as the two phenomena continue to feed each other and in a rapidly accelerati­ng manner. Ultimately, the main reason for the lack of action by political leaders and corporatio­ns is money. When the UN biodiversi­ty summit opens, a new report will be released by the UN Environmen­t Program that is likely to show the extent to which the global financing gap has widened. The short-sighted, ostrich-like approach that has been on display is certain to boomerang on the rich countries and their businesses, as neither is immune to the severe impacts of climate change or biodiversi­ty loss.

The upcoming meeting does offer a window of opportunit­y for the world to strike an agreement, maybe along the lines of the loss and damage fund that the Sharm El-Sheikh climate change summit came up with last week. But the bottom line there, as well as in Montreal, will be whether or not the rich countries live up to their promises on time and in good faith.

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