China Daily Global Weekly

Meeting advocates urgent action

At the UN conference in Kunming, world leaders urge concrete steps to prevent biodiversi­ty loss

- By XINHUA Yang Wanli in Kunming contribute­d to this report.

World leaders called for global awareness, broad consensus and concrete actions to preserve biodiversi­ty as they participat­ed in a United Nations conference held in China this week.

The leaders, in their speeches via video during the 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, or COP15, pledged to make bold efforts at a time when the world is facing a worsening crisis of biodiversi­ty loss.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Oct 12 called for global consensus on ending the biodiversi­ty crisis that has threatened the survival of humankind.

“Our two-century-long experiment with burning fossil fuels, destroying forests, wilderness and oceans, and degrading the land, has caused a biosphere catastroph­e,” he said in his speech via video.

The UN chief described humanity’s interferen­ce with nature as a “suicidal war” and stressed that “we are losing” it.

“The rate of species loss is tens to hundreds of times higher than the average of the past 10 million years — and accelerati­ng. Over a million species of plants, mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish and invertebra­tes are at risk — many within decades,” Guterres said.

Themed “Ecological Civilizati­on: Building a Shared Future for All Life on Earth,” the meeting is the first global conference convened by the UN to highlight ecological civilizati­on, a philosophy proposed by China.

To reverse biodiversi­ty loss, the leaders participat­ing in COP15 urged a nature-based approach to develop the global economy.

Stressing that the greatest impact of ecosystem collapse would be on developing countries, Guterres called for support to them, including significan­t financial resources and technology transfer.

Russian President Vladimir Putin noted that “objectives of nature conservati­on cannot be successful­ly addressed by any country individual­ly. This is a common task for all states, for all humankind, without exaggerati­on”.

Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah alSisi on Oct 12 called for deeper awareness of the importance of protecting biodiversi­ty that is closely related to human beings and their surroundin­g ecological environmen­t.

“We are in a delicate period in human history,” al-Sisi said in a video message.

“We are still dealing with the negative impact of the epidemic in various fields,” he said.

“If countries around the world do not have a deeper awareness of the importance of protecting biodiversi­ty and ecosystem security for our future ... we will be faced with a global disaster,” al-Sisi added.

Egypt held the presidency of COP14, and has made unremittin­g efforts to formulate the “post-2020 global biodiversi­ty framework” and set achievable goals supported by a clear implementa­tion mechanism, he said.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged countries bearing “the historical responsibi­lity” to be “the first to take action in the face of this threat.”

“The destructio­n of biodiversi­ty

results in a polluted environmen­t, as well as scarcity of food and water. This situation causes conflicts and forces people to migrate,” Erdogan said in his speech via video.

“Environmen­tal degradatio­n is one of the reasons that turned the Mediterran­ean, the cradle of civilizati­ons, into a refugee graveyard,” Erdogan said.

In his speech, French President Emmanuel Macron called for the adoption of an ambitious global framework that meets the challenges and expectatio­ns of various societies.

“It is up to our generation to reverse the trend and recreate virtuous synergies with nature,” he said.

It is necessary to forge a direct link between the health of nature and humanity, Macron said, underlinin­g that “we will not live healthy on a sick planet.”

Macron said he expects to attend the second part of COP15, which will

take place in Kunming during April 25-May 8 next year, in person.

If the internatio­nal community wants a successful economy and future and to create jobs, “restoring and conserving our land and ocean is critical,” he added.

Preserving biodiversi­ty will not only ease climate crisis but become “a win for people and our economies”, Costa Rican President Carlos Alvarado Quesada said in his video address.

“As we are facing the devastatin­g consequenc­es of COVID-19, we must think beyond the present and put nature in the center of our economies,” he said.

Stressing that 55 percent of global gross domestic product depends on high-functionin­g biodiversi­ty and ecosystem services, Alvarado said the economic benefits of protecting biodiversi­ty outweigh the costs.

Sadyr Zhaparov, president of Kyrgyzstan, a country with 95 percent

of the land covered by mountains, announced a five-year program to ensure the sustainabl­e developmen­t of mountain regions.

“Kyrgyzstan is open and ready for active internatio­nal cooperatio­n, and only by joint efforts we could preserve the biodiversi­ty of our planet and achieve desirable sustainabl­e developmen­t in harmony with the environmen­t,” Zhaparov said.

The leaders also called on developed countries to support developing nations in biodiversi­ty conservati­on.

Papua New Guinean Prime Minister James Marape called for financial support to help the island country preserve its rainforest­s, or the “lungs of the world.”

“My country needs developmen­t financing in exchange for concentrat­ed effort on conservati­on, and I would like to use the platform of this forum to invite partnershi­ps for this most worthwhile cause,” Marape said.

The southweste­rn Pacific island country hosts 13 percent of the world’s rainforest­s, which play a crucial role in absorbing carbon and easing global climate change.

“PNG needs partners, responsibl­e and like-minded individual­s, corporate citizens and government­s who can assist us conserve this 13 percent rainforest­s — this important lungs of the world — and this precious biodiversi­ty that is contained in our country,” Marape said.

Britain’s Prince Charles on Oct 12 called on the internatio­nal community to protect and restore biodiversi­ty and take a nature-based approach to develop the world economy.

“We need, above all, to remember that nature’s own economy provides services to our global economy that are worth around 125 trillion (US dollars) a year,” he said in a video message.

“As Chinese culture has long understood, our interrelat­ionship with nature is critical for our own health and that of everything around us,” he said.

“When we protect lands and ocean, we in fact protect ourselves: Nature bounces back, bringing with her all the benefits on which life depends.”

Stressing that the world is running out of time on protecting biodiversi­ty, Charles added, “I can only urge you to take the bold decisions that can regenerate hundreds of millions — if not billions — of hectares of degraded land throughout the world, thus protecting and restoring our planet’s biodiversi­ty and making nature the engine of our economies.”

Over 5,000 representa­tives from government­s, internatio­nal organizati­ons, research institutes and enterprise­s attended the COP15 event in Kunming.

Inger Andersen, under-secretaryg­eneral of the UN and executive director of the UN Environmen­t Programme, said the “costs of our suicidal war against nature” are growing at an alarming rate.

Elizabeth Maruma Mrema, executive secretary of the Convention on Biological Diversity, said safeguardi­ng biodiversi­ty is the defining task of this decade.

“We risk repeating the failures of the last decade,” said Mrema. “Our commitment­s must be translated into effective policies and concrete actions.”

Environmen­tal officials from nearly 20 countries, as well as the European Union, attended a roundtable on “Putting biodiversi­ty on a Path of Recovery”, both in person and virtually, on Oct 12 at the COP15 meeting.

Yasmine Fouad, environmen­t minister of Egypt, and Zhao Yingmin, vice minister of China’s Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, as co-chairs of the two-hour session, discussed with their global peers how to protect, restore and sustainabl­y use biodiversi­ty.

“Protecting and restoring biodiversi­ty is the key and foundation for solving all issues, including climate, health, food and water security and sustainabl­e developmen­t,” Zhao stressed at the opening.

“To restore and realize biological diversity is an urgent task, and mankind must immediatel­y make historic, transforma­tional and overarchin­g changes.”

“We must place species and ecosystems, as key elements of biodiversi­ty and human well-being, at the foundation of the post-2020 global biodiversi­ty framework,” said Carole Dieschbour­g, Luxembourg’s minister for environmen­t.

“We know that climate change is exerting additional stress on our cities, so we need to find strategies for mitigation. Biodiversi­ty offers wonderful tools,” Minister Celine CaronDagio­ni of Monaco said.

“An approach that focuses on the lowest common denominato­r will not suffice,” said European Commission­er for Environmen­t, Oceans and Fisheries Virginijus Sinkeviciu­s.

During the meeting, representa­tives from Australia, New Zealand, Portugal, Germany, Greece and other countries introduced their practices and achievemen­ts on various issues such as ocean protection and wildlife conservati­on.

 ?? LIUWEIBING / XINHUA ?? Chinese Vice-Premier Han Zheng, also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, calls for action to build a community for all life on Earth at the leaders’ summit of COP15 in Kunming, capital of Southwest China’s Yunnan province, on Oct 12.
LIUWEIBING / XINHUA Chinese Vice-Premier Han Zheng, also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, calls for action to build a community for all life on Earth at the leaders’ summit of COP15 in Kunming, capital of Southwest China’s Yunnan province, on Oct 12.
 ?? CHEN YEHUA / XINHUA ?? United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Oct 12 calls for global consensus on ending the biodiversi­ty crisis while addressing the 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (COP15) by video.
CHEN YEHUA / XINHUA United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Oct 12 calls for global consensus on ending the biodiversi­ty crisis while addressing the 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (COP15) by video.

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