The Borneo Post

Nature pushed to the brink by ‘runaway consumptio­n’ – WWF

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PARIS: Unbridled consumptio­n has decimated global wildlife, triggered a mass extinction and exhausted Earth’s capacity to accommodat­e humanity’s expandi ng appet i tes, t he conservati­on group WWF warned yesterday.

From 1970 to 2014, 60 per cent of all animals with a backbone — fish, birds, amphibians, reptiles and mammals — were wiped out by human activity, according to WWF’s ‘ Living Planet’ report, based on an ongoing survey of more than 4,000 species spread over 16,700 population­s scattered across the globe.

“The situation is really bad, and it keeps getting worse,” WWF Internatio­nal director general Marco Lambertini told AFP.

“The on ly good news i s that we know exactly what is happening.”

For freshwater fauna, the decline in population over the 44 years monitored was a staggering 80 per cent. Regionally, Latin America was hit hardest, seeing a nearly 90 per cent loss of wildlife over the same period.

Another dataset confirmed the depth of an unfolding mass extinction event, only the sixth in the last half-billion years.

Depending on which of Earth’s lifeforms are included, the current rate of species loss is 100 to 1,000 times higher than only a few hundred years ago, when people began to alter Earth’s chemistry and crowd other creatures out of existence.

Measured by weight, or biomass, wild animals today only account for four per cent of mammals on Earth, with humans (36 per cent) and livestock (60 per cent) making up the rest.

Ten thousand years ago that ratio was probably reversed.

“The statistics are scary,” said Piero Visconti, a researcher at the Internatio­nal Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria and one of 59 co-authors of the 80-page report.

“Unlike population declines, extinction­s are irreversib­le.”

For corals, it may already be too late. Back- to- back marine heatwaves have already wiped out up to half of the globe’s shallowwat­er reefs, which support a quarter of all marine life.

Even if humanity manages to cap global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius — mission impossible, according to some scientists — coral mortality will likely be 70 to 90 per cent.

A 2 degrees Celsius world would be a death sentence, a major UN report concluded last month.

Half-a- century of conservati­on efforts have scored spectacula­r successes, with signi f icant recover ie s among t i ger s, manatees, grizzly bears, bluefin tuna and bald eagles.

“If we didn’t make those efforts, the situation would have been much worse,” Lambertini said.

But the onslaught of hunting, shrinking habitat, pollution, illegal trade and climate change — all caused by humans — has been too much to overcome, he acknowledg­ed.

“Scientists call it the ‘ great accelerati­on’,” he said in a phone interview.

“It is the exponentia­l growth over the last 50 years in the use of energy, water, timber, fish, food, fertiliser, pesticides, minerals, plastics — everything.”

The pace of population increase — long taboo in developmen­t and conservati­on circles — also took off around 1950, the date scientists have chosen as the “gold spike,” or starting point, for a new geological period dubbed the Anthropoce­ne, or “age of man”.

In looking for answer s , conservati­onists are turning to climate change for inspiratio­n.

“We need a new global deal for nature,” said Lambertini, noting two key ingredient­s in the 195nation Paris climate treaty.

“One was the realisatio­n that climate change was dangerous for the economy and society, not just polar bears,” he said.

Similarly, he argued, threatened ecosystem services long taken for granted — drinkable water, breathable air, heat- absorbing oceans, forests that soak up CO2, productive soil — are worth tens of trillions of dollars every year.

“A healthy, sustainabl­e future for all is only possible on a planet where nature thrives and forests, oceans and rivers are teeming with biodiversi­ty and life,” said Lambertini.

The Paris Agreement, negotiated under the UN convention on climate change, also set a clear target: global warming must be held to “well below” 2 degrees Celsius, and 1.5 degrees Celsius if possible.

The parallel UN Convention on Biological Diversity ( CBD), by contrast, has lots of targets running out to 2020 which are not only too weak, but — with one possible exception — will probably not be met, Lambertini said.

 ??  ?? File photo shows an aerial view of deforestat­ion in the Western Amazon region of Brazil. — AFP photo
File photo shows an aerial view of deforestat­ion in the Western Amazon region of Brazil. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows a Royal Bengal Tiger pauses as it walks through a jungle clearing in Kaziranga National Park.
File photo shows a Royal Bengal Tiger pauses as it walks through a jungle clearing in Kaziranga National Park.
 ??  ?? Marco Lambertini
Marco Lambertini

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