The Prague Post - At UN summit, new hope for deal to save nature

EUR -
AED 4.296275
AFN 72.530383
ALL 95.440871
AMD 434.926832
ANG 2.093897
AOA 1073.922588
ARS 1657.077676
AUD 1.631078
AWG 2.108655
AZN 1.984788
BAM 1.954572
BBD 2.364335
BDT 144.419293
BGN 1.95143
BHD 0.441498
BIF 3488.838558
BMD 1.16985
BND 1.494574
BOB 8.112044
BRL 5.836365
BSD 1.173873
BTN 110.510535
BWP 15.805073
BYN 3.296758
BYR 22929.064745
BZD 2.363336
CAD 1.596764
CDF 2719.901516
CHF 0.922936
CLF 0.02663
CLP 1048.066457
CNY 7.982064
CNH 7.999342
COP 4175.477472
CRC 533.355892
CUC 1.16985
CUP 31.001031
CVE 110.195788
CZK 24.37459
DJF 209.040493
DKK 7.472524
DOP 69.785573
DZD 155.042614
EGP 61.721493
ERN 17.547754
ETB 183.297775
FJD 2.570042
FKP 0.863308
GBP 0.866444
GEL 3.141068
GGP 0.863308
GHS 13.024043
GIP 0.863308
GMD 85.398872
GNF 10302.617214
GTQ 8.974363
GYD 245.599943
HKD 9.1666
HNL 31.197539
HRK 7.532079
HTG 153.694781
HUF 364.970412
IDR 20187.988642
ILS 3.493284
IMP 0.863308
INR 110.604894
IQD 1537.847257
IRR 1538353.068017
ISK 143.400638
JEP 0.863308
JMD 185.313608
JOD 0.82938
JPY 186.58468
KES 151.382579
KGS 102.28083
KHR 4698.08939
KMF 491.336868
KPW 1052.860319
KRW 1723.96739
KWD 0.360127
KYD 0.978231
KZT 537.816806
LAK 25724.063158
LBP 105122.573358
LKR 373.601736
LRD 215.406549
LSL 19.346049
LTL 3.454264
LVL 0.707631
LYD 7.446387
MAD 10.847572
MDL 20.320237
MGA 4878.956485
MKD 61.616834
MMK 2456.731537
MNT 4207.196739
MOP 9.476229
MRU 46.872959
MUR 54.725483
MVR 18.085825
MWK 2035.530227
MXN 20.378031
MYR 4.622084
MZN 74.764285
NAD 19.346214
NGN 1595.886401
NIO 43.203234
NOK 10.875618
NPR 176.816457
NZD 1.986821
OMR 0.449804
PAB 1.173883
PEN 4.093347
PGK 5.09782
PHP 71.636361
PKR 327.194693
PLN 4.246492
PYG 7395.418313
QAR 4.291105
RON 5.092127
RSD 117.415511
RUB 87.708745
RWF 1720.319504
SAR 4.388007
SBD 9.415637
SCR 16.032671
SDG 702.493148
SEK 10.831801
SGD 1.493097
SHP 0.873411
SLE 28.779107
SLL 24531.170166
SOS 670.878635
SRD 43.711485
STD 24213.538093
STN 24.484726
SVC 10.270978
SYP 129.326091
SZL 19.330024
THB 38.01136
TJS 11.025869
TMT 4.100325
TND 3.415155
TOP 2.816719
TRY 52.705854
TTD 7.971062
TWD 36.887715
TZS 3044.679138
UAH 51.771405
UGX 4367.331637
USD 1.16985
UYU 46.690675
UZS 14173.46142
VES 566.130857
VND 30822.044328
VUV 138.30625
WST 3.191133
XAF 655.545266
XAG 0.015952
XAU 0.000253
XCD 3.161579
XCG 2.115554
XDR 0.815288
XOF 655.550866
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.144472
ZAR 19.409395
ZMK 10530.059014
ZMW 22.216236
ZWL 376.691301
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    64

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    22.86

    -0.39%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    15.4

    +0.65%

  • AZN

    -2.2400

    187.51

    -1.19%

  • RIO

    0.3400

    99.95

    +0.34%

  • BTI

    -0.7700

    57.32

    -1.34%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    36.39

    -0.38%

  • NGG

    -0.1900

    87.23

    -0.22%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.26

    -0.26%

  • GSK

    -0.2200

    54.22

    -0.41%

  • BCC

    -0.2900

    83.86

    -0.35%

  • VOD

    -0.1200

    15.51

    -0.77%

  • BP

    -0.2800

    45.97

    -0.61%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    23.56

    -1.36%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    12.83

    -0.47%

At UN summit, new hope for deal to save nature
At UN summit, new hope for deal to save nature / Photo: ANDREJ IVANOV - AFP

At UN summit, new hope for deal to save nature

Top officials at high-stakes UN biodiversity negotiations said Saturday they were confident of securing a major deal to save the natural world from destruction.

Text size:

Observers had warned the COP15 talks aimed at sealing a "peace pact for nature" risked collapse due to disagreement over how much the rich world should pay to save ecosystems in developing countries.

But the Chinese chair of the conference said Saturday he was "greatly confident" delegates would reach a deal and his Canadian counterpart said "tremendous" progress had been made.

"I am greatly confident that we can ... keep our ambitions as well as achieve consensus," China's Environment Minister Huang Runqiu told reporters in Montreal, where the COP15 meeting is being held.

His Canadian counterpart Steven Guilbeault echoed his statement, saying: "We've made tremendous progress... I don't know about how many of us thought we could get there."

French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted: "With just a few days to go before the end of the COP 15 Biodiversity Conference in Montreal, my message to our partners is: now is not the time for small decisions, let's go big!

"Let's work together to achieve the most ambitious agreement possible. The world is depending on it."

The negotiations officially run until December 19, but could run longer if needed.

China holds the presidency of COP15, but its strict Covid rules prevented it from hosting, leaving that task to Canada in deep winter.

At stake is the future of the planet: whether humanity can roll back the habitat destruction, pollution and climate crisis that threaten an estimated one million plant and animal species with extinction.

The text is meant to be a roadmap for nations through 2030. The last 10-year plan, signed in Japan in 2010, failed to achieve any of its objectives, a failure blamed widely on its lack of monitoring mechanisms.

Major draft goals now include a cornerstone pledge to protect 30 percent of the world's land and oceans by 2030.

That ambitious objective is being compared to the Paris deal commitment to hold long-term planetary warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius -- or at least to 2.0 degrees.

- Money matters -

The more than 20 targets under discussion include reducing environmentally destructive farming subsidies, requiring businesses to assess and report on their biodiversity impacts, and tackling the scourge of invasive species.

Representatives of Indigenous communities, who safeguard 80 percent of the world's remaining biodiversity, want their rights to practice stewardship of their lands to be enshrined in the final agreement.

The issue of how much money the rich countries -- collectively known as the Global North -- will send to the Global South, home to most of the world's biodiversity, has emerged as the biggest sticking point.

Developing countries say developed nations grew rich by exploiting their resources and the South should be paid to preserve its ecosystems.

Several countries have announced new commitments either at the COP or recently, with Europe emerging as a key leader. The European Union has committed seven billion euros ($7.4 billion) for the period until 2027, double its prior pledge.

But these commitments are still well short of what observers say is needed, and what developing countries are seeking.

Brazil has led that charge, proposing flows of $100 billion annually, compared to the roughly $10 billion at present.

Whether international aid is delivered via a new fund, an existing mechanism called the Global Environment Facility (GEF), or a halfway solution involving a new "trust fund" within the GEF is still up for debate.

With the clock ticking, over 3,000 scientists have written an open letter to policymakers, calling for immediate action to stop the destruction of critical ecosystems.

"We owe this to ourselves and to future generations -- we can't wait any longer," they said.

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.

B.Svoboda--TPP