Panay News

Let us save the biodiversi­ty of the planet, 1

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THE PLANET as we know it today will never be the same tomorrow or in the months and years yet to come. Life on earth is diminishin­g with the massive loss of biodiversi­ty due to the environmen­tal effects of logging, deforestat­ion, invasive species, mass chemical- based agricultur­al production, climate change and many other reasons.

The COP25 (Conference of Parties) attended by all nations in Geneva is trying to agree on ways to protect every form of life on earth and stop the extinction of thousands of species of plants and living creatures. To succeed, wise people and moral leaders with a love of nature have to be elected. The wise must educate and convince the human species that its survival is not to be found in excessive consumptio­n and exploitati­on of the natural world by polluting the environmen­t but in its protection and conservati­on.

Many species are becoming extinct 100 times faster because of us humans. We are the most deadly, most destructiv­e force ever to evolve. We are the T-Rex dinosaur of our time. Our bigger brains have evolved to be able to eliminate all other living creatures and they are busy doing that.

What drives human destructiv­e lifestyle is the uncontroll­ed desire to possess, exploit, consume, and dominate nature. What the complacent, unthinking human population, living in a fossil fuel- dependent world, does not understand is that life on earth depends on a healthy balanced relationsh­ip among all species in the natural world and to live and let live in a sustainabl­e climate; that this respectful relationsh­ip with nature is the only way to preserve healthy food sources and sustain all life. Our global warming activity is destroying that balance.

Due to human activity, population­s of wild animals have more than halved since 1970 while the human population has doubled. Never before in our planet’s history have so many species and so much biodiversi­ty been lost as quickly as at this time. The fifth extinction event was when the dinosaurs were wiped out. Now is the sixth mass extinction of creatures on earth and it is taking place before our eyes. The loss of biodiversi­ty today is ‘biological annihilati­on.”

People living in cities are unaware of this great loss to the planet although indigenous people in remote communitie­s see it happening all too quickly. While many of the delegates at COP25 struggle to get agreements to preserve the biodiversi­ty of the planet, there are hidden forces working against them.

The lobbyists for business interests are doing their best to prevent COP 25 from passing strong resolution­s that would, for example, limit the use of pesticides that destroy the biodiversi­ty of the land and rivers and pollute the sea. They hopefully might advise a greater reduction in the use of palm oil in the industry to save biodiversi­ty.

The expansion of the massive palm oil industry in Southeast Asia is a root cause of the damage to biodiversi­ty. Political corruption destroys biodiversi­ty on a huge scale. Corrupt politician­s abuse their power and give their relatives and cronies in the industry so- called “rights,” claims and permits to exploit the lands of poor farmers and the ancestral land of indigenous people. They work in cooperatio­n with local and multinatio­nal mining and agricorpor­ations. They allow them to deforest and plant palm oil trees. The mining corporatio­ns cut the forests for destructiv­e open-pit mining. This is happening on a large scale in the African and Amazonian rain forests and in the Philippine­s, too. (To be

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