Marco Lambertini (2nd from right), the Director General of WWF International, speaks during a press conference following the release of new COP15 text during the United the Nations Biodiversity Conference (COP15) at the Palais des congrès de Montréal in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on 18 December 2022.

MONTREAL, CANADA — Countries gathered at a UN meeting on biodiversity in Montreal were inching closer Sunday to a deal to protect 30 per cent of the planet by 2030 and to stump up $30 billion in yearly aid for the developing world to save their ecosystems.

Fraught talks to seal a “peace pact for nature” came to a head as summit chair China presented a long-awaited compromise text that was cautiously welcomed by many, though some nations said more work was needed.

The plan maps out action for the next decade to roll back habitat destruction, pollution and the climate crisis that scientists say threatens a million plant and animal species with extinction.

It calls on wealthy countries to increase financial aid to the developing world to $20 billion annually by 2025, rising to $30 billion per year by 2030 while ensuring 30 per cent of land and sea areas are effectively conserved and managed by the end of this decade.

The text includes language safeguarding the rights of Indigenous people as stewards of their lands, a key demand of campaigners, but was watered down in other areas — for example, only encouraging businesses to report their biodiversity impacts rather than mandating them to do so.

The draft still needs to be agreed upon by the 196 signatories to the Convention on Biological Diversity before it is finalized.

Environmentalists say the “30 by 30” goal is the biodiversity equivalent of the Paris Agreement, which seeks to limit long-term global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

The meeting, called COP15, is being held in Canada because of China’s strict Covid rules.

Risk of pushback

“Six months ago, we didn’t even know if we would have a COP this year, let alone a Paris moment for biodiversity, and that sincerely is where I think we’re heading,” said Canada’s environment minister Steven Guilbeault in enthusiastic remarks.

But European commissioner for environment Virginijus Sinkevicius struck a more cautious note, signalling that the funding figures being discussed could be problematic.

“If we have other countries committing to fulfil those goals, such as China, I think that can be realistic,” he said, also calling on Arab states to play their part.

Colombia’s environment minister Susana Muhamad said she was “optimistic that the main goals have been landed,” calling the draft an “important step forward.”

Braulio Dias, however, speaking on behalf of the incoming Brazilian government of Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, called for “better resource mobilization” — technical speak for more aid to developing countries, a concern echoed by the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Conservation groups said the text was a mixed bag.

“The draft text makes the largest commitment to ocean and land conservation in history,” said Brian O’Donnell, of the Campaign for Nature.

But Georgina Chandler, of Britain’s Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, said she was worried about a lack of numeric “milestones” for restoring ecosystems on the way to 2050.

“We’re basically not measuring progress until 28 years’ time, which is madness,” she said.

Funding dispute

Developing countries, spearheaded by Brazil, had been seeking the creation of a new fund to signal the Global North’s commitment to the cause. But the draft text instead suggests a compromise: a “trust fund” within the existing mechanism, called the Global Environment Facility.

Colombia’s Muhamad said her country would accept this as a stopgap measure.

The more than 20 targets also include cutting environmentally destructive farming subsidies, reducing pesticide use and tackling invasive species.

But the issue of how much money the rich countries will send to the developing world, home to most of the planet’s biodiversity, has been the biggest sticking point.

Lower-income nations point out developed countries grew rich by exploiting their natural resources and therefore demand to be paid well to protect their own.

Current financial flows for nature to the developing world are estimated at around $10 billion per year.

Beyond the moral implications, there is the question of self-interest: $44 trillion of economic value generation — more than half the world’s total GDP — depends on nature and its services.

— AFP

Subscribe
Notify of
1 Comment
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

[Forum] Sighting of a critically endangered and rare ‘Greater Slow Loris’ in Singapore

by John Lee, founder of Wildlife Asia (Singapore) Following my previous sightings of…

UNESCO conference tackles disinformation, hate speech

by Lucie Peytermann PARIS, FRANCE — Participants at a global UN conference…

China’s Xi spotlights national security in congress closing speech

Xi Jinping emphasizes strengthening national security in his first address after being handed a historic third term as China’s president, vowing to promote the modernization of national defense and build a “Great Wall of steel” to safeguard sovereignty, security and development interests.

Indonesia policeman jailed over football stadium crush

Indonesian court jails a police officer for 18 months over negligence in one of the worst stadium disasters in football history. Last year’s crush in Malang killed 135 people after a football match when police fired tear gas causing a deadly stampede. The court found Hasdarmawan, a commander for the East Java police’s mobile brigade unit, guilty of failing to predict the situation and ordering the tear gas. The sentence was shorter than the three years prosecutors had asked for. Another police officer was found not guilty, while one more was awaiting a verdict on negligence.