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COP15: Nations reach 'historic' deal to protect nature

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'The UN Development Programme said the "historic agreement" meant people around the world could hope for real progress to halt biodiversity loss.'

'Nations have agreed to protect a third of the planet for nature by 2030 in a landmark deal aimed at safeguarding biodiversity.

There will also be targets for protecting vital ecosystems such as rainforests and wetlands and the rights of indigenous peoples.

The agreement at the COP15 UN biodiversity summit in Montreal, Canada, came early on Monday morning.

The summit had been moved from China and postponed due to Covid.

China, which was in charge of the meeting, brought down the gavel on the deal despite a last minute objection from the Democratic Republic of Congo.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres hailed the deal and said: "We are finally starting to forge a peace pact with nature."

The main points include:

- Maintaining, enhancing and restoring ecosystems, including halting species extinction and maintaining genetic diversity

- "Sustainable use" of biodiversity - essentially ensuring that species and habitats can provide the services they provide for humanity, such as food and clean water

- Ensuring that the benefits of resources from nature, like medicines that come from plants, are shared fairly and equally and that indigenous peoples' rights are protected

- Paying for and putting resources into biodiversity: Ensuring that money and conservation efforts get to where they are needed.


"It is truly a moment that will mark history as Paris did for climate," Canada's Minister for the Environment and Climate Change Steven Guilbeault told reporters. The Paris climate deal saw nations agreeing in 2015 to keep world temperature rise below 2C.

The summit in Montreal had been regarded as a "last chance" to put nature on a path to recovery. Throughout the talks there was division over the strength of ambition and how to finance the plans.

One big sticking point was over how to fund conservation efforts in the parts of the globe that harbour some of the world's most outstanding biodiversity.

Biodiversity refers to all the Earth's living things and the way they are connected in a complex web of life that sustains the planet.

..

The UN Development Programme said the "historic agreement" meant people around the world could hope for real progress to halt biodiversity loss.

Scientists have warned that with forests and grasslands being lost at unprecedented rates and oceans under pressure from pollution, humans are pushing the Earth beyond safe limits.

This includes increasing the risk of diseases, like SARs CoV-2, Ebola and HIV, spilling over from wild animals into human populations.'

- COP15: Nations reach 'historic' deal to protect nature, December 19, 2022



Context (Restore Biodiversity) - '..species can recover, if states commit to sustainable practices..'

(Global Healing 2020 - 2050)(BBC) - Oceans can be successfully restored by 2050, say scientists

(Restore Biodiversity) - “A resilient and net zero world is not possible unless the ocean and its biodiversity are protected”

(Global Healing 2020 - 2050) - First WTO deal on fishing subsidies hailed as historic despite ‘big holes’


(PFAS) - Pollution: 'Forever chemicals' in rainwater [in most locations on Earth] exceed safe levels

''Nevertheless, free-market-environmentalism theorists have overlooked another major cause of the poor use of natural resources: the credit expansion that central banks orchestrate and cyclically inject into the economic process through the private banking system, which operates with the privilege of using a fractional reserve .. The result is unnecessary pressure on the entire natural environment..'

- Jesús Huerta de Soto ('..ethics in particular .. absolute principle of ethics..' - '..deze fundamentele ethiek..')