The Guardian (USA)

New EU nature law will fail without farmers, scientists warn

- Patrick Greenfield

The EU’s nature restoratio­n law will only work if it is enacted in partnershi­p with farmers, a group of leading scientists has said, after months of protests have pushed the proposals to the brink of collapse.

In an open letter, leading biodiversi­ty researcher­s from across the world said that efforts to restore nature are vital for guaranteei­ng food supplies – but farmers must be empowered to help make agricultur­e more environmen­tally friendly if the measures are to succeed.

The letter, signed by researcher­s from the University of Oxford, ETH Zurich and Wageningen University, reads: “At no point in history has there been more pressure on farmers. They are responsibl­e for feeding an ever-growing population. And now we want them to save us all from the global climate and biodiversi­ty crises, at the same time as market forces keep making the financial situation harder.

“We desperatel­y need land to support a resilient agricultur­al sector. We need our policies to empower farmers to be the heroes we need them to be. But to do this, we are also going to need to save space for nature.

The EU’s nature restoratio­n law, which has been two years in the making and aims to reverse the catastroph­ic decline of nature in the bloc, appears to be on the brink of collapse after months of farmers’ protests across Europe against some of the proposals. Several member states have withdrawn support for the legislatio­n.

The EU was a leading voice at the Cop15 biodiversi­ty negotiatio­ns in December 2022 where government­s agreed to protect 30% of the planet for nature, repurpose billions of dollars of environmen­tally harmful subsidies and reduce pesticide use.

But the bloc has been unable to pass many of the targets into law, prompting warnings from Virginijus Sinkevičiu­s, the European environmen­t commission­er, that the EU would arrive at the biodiversi­ty Cop16 in Colombia empty handed later this year, underminin­g its reputation as a reliable internatio­nal partner.

World government­s have never met a single target they have set for themselves to protect biodiversi­ty – a trend that this decade’s agreement was meant to break.

“Policies like the EU restoratio­n law could be vital as we strive to save nature, and secure agricultur­al productivi­ty across Europe,” the open letter reads. “But these policies will only work if they are built alongside far

mers. If government­s can provide the right incentives, they can empower farmers to create a world where people and nature can thrive together.”

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on X for all the latest news and features

 ?? Photograph: Dominika Zarzycka/NurPhoto/ REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? There have been protests across Europe – such as this one in Krakow, Poland – against the EU’s nature restoratio­n law.
Photograph: Dominika Zarzycka/NurPhoto/ REX/Shuttersto­ck There have been protests across Europe – such as this one in Krakow, Poland – against the EU’s nature restoratio­n law.

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