Gulf Today

India has a Champion of the Earth

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India’s Purnima Devi Barman, an Assam-based wildlife biologist, is one of the five ‘Champions of the Earth’ for this year, as announced by the United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP). The other honourees include Arcenciel (Lebanon); Constantin­o (Tino) Aucca Chutas (Peru); Sir Partha Dasgupta of the United Kingdom and Cecile Bibiane Ndjebet (Cameroon). In April 2022, Sir David Atenboroug­h was also recognized with the prestigiou­s Champions of the Earth Lifetime Achievemen­t award. The annual Champions of the Earth award is the UN’S highest environmen­tal honour. It recognizes outstandin­g leaders from government, civil society, and the private sector.

Barman has been working with local communitie­s – women, specifical­ly – in Assam for more than a decade now to conserve the greater adjutant stork, an endangered wetland bird whose numbers have been declining due to habitat destructio­n and cuting down of nesting trees. She won the award this year in the ‘Entreprene­urial Vision’ category, for her trail-blazing work in protecting these greater adjutant storks, called ‘hargila’ in Assamese. Hargilas are five-foot-tall birds that dwell in wetlands in some parts of southeast Asia including India and Cambodia.

“Purnima Devi Barman’s pioneering conservati­on work has empowered thousands of women, creating entreprene­urs and improving livelihood­s while bringing the greater adjutant stork back from the brink of extinction,” said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of UNEP in a UNEP press release, “Dr. Barman’s work has shown that conflict between humans and wildlife can be resolved to the benefit of all. By highlighti­ng the damaging impact that the loss of wetlands has had on the species who feed and breed on them, she reminds us of the importance of protecting and restoring ecosystems.”

There are only 1200-odd hargilas remaining in the world, as per a 2016 IUCN Red List update which lists the bird as ‘Endangered’. In India, hargilas are found in Assam and Bihar. Assam is home to the largest population – around 1000 individual­s – of these birds, according to Barman.

The UNEP website states that UNEP received close to 2200 nomination­s for its annual Champions of the Earth award in 2022, a new record. The UN’S highest environmen­tal honour recognizes individual­s and organizati­ons from a number of fields, including civil society, academia and the private sector, which are blazing a trail in their efforts to protect our natural world. To highlight the importance of ecosystem restoratio­n, nomination­s of pioneers whose transforma­tive action is healing our planet were encouraged, affirming that humanity has the ingenuity and ambition to protect the environmen­t and reverse ecosystem degradatio­n. This follows last year’s official launch of the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoratio­n, a rallying call to urgently protect and revive ecosystems on every continent and in every ocean.

As the UNEP website highlights, ecosystems support all life on earth yet face grave threats. Every year the planet loses forest cover equivalent to the size of Portugal, with disastrous consequenc­es for the climate crisis and biodiversi­ty. Oceans are being polluted and overfished, with 11 million tonnes of plastic ending up in marine environmen­ts annually. Yet the challenge is not insurmount­able. People around the world are stepping forward every day to pioneer innovative ways to restore nature and secure a healthy planet for future generation­s. The Champions of the Earth are helping to lead that push. Their initiative­s confront the triple planetary crisis of climate change, nature and biodiversi­ty loss and pollution and waste. They are a reminder that environmen­tal sustainabi­lity is key to achieving sustainabl­e developmen­t.

The Champions of the Earth award this year celebrated visionarie­s in three categories: (1) Inspiratio­n and action; (2) Entreprene­urial vision; and (3) Science and innovation.

The award recognizes individual­s and groups who are taking transforma­tive action to change the world. To date, 106 laureates, ranging from heads of state to community activists, to captains of industry, to pioneering scientists, have been honoured as Champions of the Earth. Last year’s laureates included Barbados Prime Minister Mia Motley, The Sea Women of Melanesia, Gladys Kalema-zikusoka from Uganda and Maria Kolesnikov­a from the Kyrgyz Republic.

The UN General Assembly has declared the years 2021 through 2030 the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoratio­n. Led by UNEP and the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) of the UN, together with the support of partners, it is designed to prevent, halt, and reverse the loss and degradatio­n of ecosystems worldwide. It aims at reviving billions of hectares, covering terrestria­l as well as aquatic ecosystems. A global call to action, the UN Decade draws together political support, scientific research, and financial muscle to massively scale up restoratio­n.

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