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The United Nations COP15 biodiversity summit has been delayed once again, this time until 2022. The Chinese ministry of ecology and environment confirmed that the event, planned to be held in Kunming, China will be held in two phases split between fall 2021 and spring 2022. Environmental and biodiversity advocates say that although the world is running out of time to stop biodiversity loss and global temperature rise, the COVID-19 pandemic has made this decision “inevitable” but that they won’t quit working in the meantime.
Why This Matters: The world is currently experiencing what some scientists (including a UN Panel of experts) believe may be a mass extinction event — one million species are now threatened with extinction. Environmental advocates say that one of the fastest and most effective routes to halting rapid biodiversity loss is to protect 30% of all lands and waters by 3030, which President Biden has pledged to achieve. In July, U.N. negotiators released a set of draft goals intended to propel member nations toward the 30×30 goal and include targets like reducing pesticide use, curbing plastic pollution, and annual funding for conservation in developing countries. Now implementing those goals is delayed, and according to a recent International Panel on Climate Change report, the world has no time to waste.
Pandemic Delays
The conference has already been delayed twice due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This time, however, the conference will instead be split into two phases. The first will take place in October as initially planned, with most people attending virtually. This phase will be largely procedural. The second phase will be from April 25 to May 8, 2022, where attendees will meet face to face to negotiate the targets for the global biodiversity framework drafted in July.
Stakeholders are disappointed in the delay but say that the decision was in the best interest of public health as Delta variant cases continue to rise. “Given the urgency of the biodiversity crisis, the decision to delay talks is not ideal. But in light of the global pandemic and the need for face-to-face negotiations, it is an inevitable choice,”said Li Shuo, a policy adviser for Greenpeace China. “Today’s decision does not mean a negotiation holiday.”
Shuo is calling on the Chinese government to rise to the challenge of ensuring a successful COP15 conference. Meanwhile, U.K. environmental groups hope their government will do the same at the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow this November. “Our leaders must take this opportunity for the U.K. to live up to our ambition to show global leadership on the environment,”said Beccy Speight, chief executive of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. “This will send a powerful message to the international community that our words are being backed by urgent action to revive our world with clear, legally binding targets to halt and reverse the wildlife decline in the U.K. by 2030.”
By Ashira Morris, ODP Staff Writer Late last week, President Biden and a critical mass of Democrats in the Senate and House agreed on the details of Build Back Better legislation — a $1.85 trillion overall investment that includes a record-setting $555 billion dollars to take on the climate crisis. The agreement marked a […]
By Amy Lupica, ODP Daily Editor Top executives from Big Oil companies ExxonMobil, BP, Chevron, and Shell testified before Congress yesterday amid accusations and revelations about their industry’s efforts to mislead the public about human-caused climate change while claiming to be in favor of climate action. A report released Thursday morning by the House Committee […]
By Natasha Lasky, ODP Staff Writer As the world gets ready for COP26 in Glasgow next week, many nations are upping their pledges to lower emissions before 2030. But according to a UN report released Tuesday, even if Argentina, Britain, Canada, the EU, South Africa, and the US achieve their pledged goals, it would account […]
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