The Borneo Post (Sabah)

EU adopts ‘life insurance’ biodiversi­ty plan

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BRUSSELS: European Union (EU) environmen­t ministers on Friday adopted a biodiversi­ty strategy aimed at protecting ecosystems, a move deemed essential to tackling climate change and reducing the risk of future pandemics.

Meeting in Luxembourg, the 27 national ministers backed the EU Commission’s strategy of placing at least 30 per cent of the EU’s land maritime areas under special protection.

The objective will be reached “with all member states participat­ing in this joint effort”, the joint statement said.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has once again shown us the fundamenta­l importance of ecosystems and biodiversi­ty for our health and economic and social stability,” said German environmen­t minister Svenja Schulze.

“Biodiversi­ty is our life insurance: it supplies clean air and water, food, building material and clothing. It creates jobs and livelihood­s. With the destructio­n of nature there is also the risk of disease outbreaks and pandemics,” she added.

The European government­s now expect the EU commission – the bloc’s executive arm – to integrate the biodiversi­ty policy objectives in relevant future legislativ­e proposals.

The joint statement stressed the need “to fully integrate these objectives into other sectors such as agricultur­e, fisheries and forestry”.

It also said member states wanted some EU climate action funding to be directed to biodiversi­ty programmes.

A Monday report by the European Environmen­t Agency (EEA) warned that more than 80 per cent of the EU’s natural habitats were in poor or bad condition.

“We clearly need a large-scale restoratio­n in Europe,” EEA expert Carlos Romao, one of the authors of the report, said at the time.

Friday’s EU initiative received a cautious welcome from environmen­tal groups.

“Today’s endorsemen­t is a much-needed beacon of hope,” the WWF said in a statement.

But the group said the EU ministers had “failed to make real progress on the EU climate law, ignoring the European Parliament’s recent support for a 60 per cent emissions reduction target for 2030”.

Strong difference­s remain between member states on that issue, with Poland leading a group of countries who believe that such a cut, or the 55 per cent from 1990 standards put forward by the Commission for 2030, are not feasible for economies reliant on carbon fuel.

The current agreed drop is 40 per cent.

The European Parliament also easily passed a massive farm subsidy bill on Friday, to the fury of environmen­tal activists who say it fell well short of EU commitment­s to fight climate change.

“It’s five minutes to midnight on the climate emergency clock, but our government­s are stalling,” said Greenpeace EU climate policy adviser Sebastian Mang.

“Meanwhile, the gas industry, the industrial farming lobby, airlines and carmakers are shooting holes in the EU Green Deal, and our chance of a safe climate for people and nature is fading.” — AFP

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