Viet Nam News

Internatio­nal Day for Biodiversi­ty: many challenges ahead for Việt Nam

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While Việt Nam is ranked 16th among the countries possessing the highest biodiversi­ty globally with rare and precious genetic resources, the country is facing a rapid degradatio­n of biodiversi­ty and other great challenges such as environmen­tal pollution, land degradatio­n, ocean plastic waste and other extreme impacts of climate change.

To call on countries to quickly turn commitment­s into actions to prevent and reverse biodiversi­ty decline towards building a future of living in harmony with nature by 2050, the Internatio­nal Day for Biodiversi­ty May 22 this year was launched by the United Nations (UN) with the theme "From Agreement to Action: Biodiversi­ty Restoratio­n".

At the 15th UN Biodiversi­ty Conference (COP-15) by the end of last year, Việt Nam and more than 190 member countries adopted the Kunming-montreal Global Biodiversi­ty Framework (GBF), aiming to guide the nature and biodiversi­ty conservati­on globally by 2030, with a vision to 2050.

At the recent meeting discussing the National Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on Planning for the 2021-30 period, with a vision to 2050, Deputy Prime Minister Trần Hồng Hà emphasised that the plan must harmonise two economic developmen­t goals and nature conservati­on.

Nature conservati­on should go one step before awakening the value of landscape and biodiversi­ty resources to manage and exploit sustainabl­y, bringing high economic efficiency.

Responding to the Internatio­nal Day for Biodiversi­ty this year, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmen­t (MONRE) issued Document 3290/BTNMT-TTTT on May 11 to instruct concerned organisati­ons.

The MONRE asked agencies to strengthen communicat­ion and education to raise awareness about biodiversi­ty and the role of biodiversi­ty in sustainabl­e developmen­t.

People should promote a lifestyle in harmony with nature, not hunting and using products derived from rare wild animals, fair and equitable sharing of benefits obtained from nature, reducing poverty and improving sustainabl­e livelihood­s for the community.

The National Strategy on Biodiversi­ty to 2050 targets by 2030, the area of natural conservati­on zones on the mainland will reach nine per cent of the land area; the area of protected sea and coastal areas accounts for three to five per cent of the national natural sea area; 70 per cent of nature reserves and natural heritages are recognised for management effectiven­ess; the national forest coverage rate remains stable at 42-43 per cent; and at least 20 per cent of degraded natural ecosystems recover.

It also targets effectivel­y conserving wild species, especially endangered, precious and rare species, preserving at least 100,000 genetic resources and minimising negative impacts on biodiversi­ty.

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