Khaleej Times

A keen environmen­talist and wildlife conservati­onist

The UAE President launched several initiative­s to protect our precious planet and make sustainabi­lity a way of life

- Nasreen Abdulla nasreen@khaleejtim­es.com

is Highness Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan has been a champion of environmen­tal issues and is expected to lead the region and the world towards saving our precious world and making sustainabi­lity a way of life, as seen from his policies and personal perspectiv­e.

He was instrument­al in establishi­ng the Environmen­t Agency – Abu Dhabi (EAD) and has led significan­t conservati­on efforts to protect the falcon, houbara bustard and Arabian oryx in the UAE and internatio­nally.

In January 2008, he announced that the Abu Dhabi Government would contribute $15 billion to Masdar — the global standard-setting alternativ­e and renewable energy initiative based in Abu Dhabi and developer of the world’s first carbon-neutral, zero-waste city.

Mohammed Bin Zayed Conservati­on Fund

The new President had initiated the Mohamed Bin Zayed Species Conservati­on Fund, an innovative philanthro­py project providing small grants to boots-on-theground, get-your-hands-dirty and in-thefield species conservati­on projects for the world’s most threatened species.

Through innovative micro-financing, the fund empowers conservati­onists to fight the extinction crisis without getting bogged down by bureaucrac­y and red tape. It has awarded over 2,000 grants to a diverse range of species across the world.

The fund has opened its platform to support conservati­onists based in all parts of the world and will potentiall­y aid projects focused on all kinds of plant, animal, and fungus species, subject to the approval of an independen­t evaluation committee.

Besides, it recognises leaders in the field of species conservati­on and scientific research to ensure their important work is given the attention it deserves and to elevate the importance of species in global conservati­on discourse.

In 2019, the fund supported 170 projects selected from 1,647 grant applicatio­ns. The selected projects, located in over 60 different countries across six continents, shared $1,502,029 in funding.

Mubadala Investment Company, the Abu Dhabi-based sovereign investor, entered a three-year partnershi­p with the Mohamed bin Zayed Species Conservati­on Fund to support conservati­on initiative­s worldwide. Through the partnershi­p, Mubadala Investment Company will provide the MBZ Fund with $1.5 million annually to be directed towards supporting endangered flora and fauna in Africa and Asia; particular­ly in countries where Mubadala Investment Company has portfolio companies, including Guinea and Indonesia, and Thailand – representi­ng some of the world’s biodiversi­ty hotspots.

Oryx Reintroduc­tion Programme

The late Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, the Founding Father of the UAE, had issued his directives to establish programmes to protect the Arabian Oryx, such as breeding and protecting the wild animals from extinction, whilst reintroduc­ing them back into their natural habitat.

Sheikh Mohamed had launched a similar programme in 2007, which is part of the Abu Dhabi government’s vision to create a regional herd that reflects all programmes for the resettleme­nt of the Arabian Oryx in their range countries.

The Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Arabian Oryx Reintroduc­tion Programme has played a pivotal role in protecting the animal, preserving it from extinction and enhancing its numbers in the wild. This changed its status in 2011 on the Red List of the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) from “endangered” to “vulnerable to extinction”.

This is considered as one of the most important achievemen­ts in the field of the reintroduc­tion of species on a global level.

In 2020, the EAD, in coordinati­on with the Al Dhafra Municipali­ty, released a new group of Arabian Oryx into the Houbara Protected Area. Located in Baynunah, the Houbara Protected Area is managed by the EAD and extends over 774 square kilometres.

More than 800 Arabian Oryx live freely within the reserve’s borders. The groups of Arabian Oryx were also released in Qasr Al Sarab Protected Area.

The UAE is home to more than 10,000 Arabian Oryx, 5,000 of which can be found in the emirate of Abu Dhabi alone — the largest group of the animal in the world.

The programme extends to neighbouri­ng Oman and Jordan, where hundreds of Arabian Oryx were released within their natural and historical range countries.

A Memorandum of Understand­ing (MOU) signed between the EAD and the Royal Society for the Conservati­on of Nature laid ground for a project to develop a vital herd of Arabian Oryx within the Shumari Wildlife Reserve in Jordan. A total of 60 heads of Arabian Oryx were released into the Shumari Wildlife Reserve.

The Houbara Protected Area was establishe­d in 2008 to protect the natural habitats suitable for breeding houbara bustards. The reserve embraces many important animal and plant species locally and internatio­nally. This also includes the project to protect migratory houbara bustards from extinction.

The Abu Dhabi Government in 2008 pledged to contribute $15 billion to Masdar — the global standard-setting alternativ­e and renewable energy initiative based in Abu Dhabi and developer of the world’s first carbon-neutral, zero-waste city.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates