More than 80% of countries have
failed to submit plans to meet a UN agreement to halt the destruction of
Earth’s ecosystems, new analysis has found.
Nearly two years ago, the
world struck
a once-in-a-decade deal in Montreal, Canada, that included targets to
protect 30% of land and sea for nature, reform billions of dollars on
environmentally harmful subsidies and slash pesticide usage. Countries
committed to submit their plans for meeting the agreement before
the biodiversity
Cop16 in Cali, Colombia, which begins this month – but only 25
countries have done so.
The other 170 countries have failed
to meet the deadline. The world has never yet met a single target set in the
history of UN biodiversity agreements, and there had been a major push to make
sure this decade was different.
Analysis by Carbon
Brief and the Guardian shows that some of the most important
ecosystems on the planet are not covered by National Biodiversity Strategies
and Action Plans (NBSAPs).
Only five of the 17 megadiverse
countries, home to about 70% of the world’s biodiversity, produced NBSAPs:
Australia, China, Indonesia, Malaysia and Mexico. Suriname was the only Amazon
rainforest nation to submit a plan, and no Congo basin nations had produced
NBSAPs by the deadline. Canada, Italy, France and Japan were the only G7
nations to meet the deadline. The UK has submitted a technical document to the
UN convention on biological diversity but is not expected to publish its plan
until the beginning of 2025, citing the change of government.
Crystal Davis, global director for
the Food, Land and Water Program at the World Resources Institute, said:
“Nature is facing a crisis, largely driven by humanity’s use of the land and
ocean … at Cop16,
it’s time for all countries to step up and turn a landmark global agreement to
protect and restore nature into action.”
Colombia, despite hosting the
summit, also failed to meet the deadline, but said it would present its plan
during the meeting. Brazil, which failed to meet the deadline, said it was
formulating a plan that would last until the middle of the century and had been
delayed due to the scale of what it was trying to achieve. Other countries are
expected to present NBSAPs at Cop16 but it was unclear how many would be
unveiled, the UN said.
“More NBSAPs would be better,
that’s clear,” said UN biodiversity chief Astrid Schomaker. “We expect more to
be announced at Cop16 – including some of the big ones like India, who want to
have the ministerial announcement at Cop16 and give it a lot of profile.
Braulio Dias, director of
biodiversity conservation at the Brazilian ministry of environment who is
responsible for the NBSAP process, said he expected his country would publish a
plan in early 2025.
“We are working on a new NBSAP
extending till 2050. Brazil is a huge country with the largest share of
biodiversity, with a large population with a complex governance,” he said.
Dr V Rajagopalan, chair of India’s
working group tasked with reviewing the country’s national biodiversity plan,
told Carbon Brief that the goals of the global nature deal must be adapted to
local contexts.
“Our situation is different from
the west: what can be done there, cannot be done here,” he said. “For example,
subsidies are a challenge for us – similarly, pesticides – because of our
agricultural status and food security requirements. But, still, we have kept
our targets very ambitious.”
-Patrick Greenfield & Daisy Dunne,
The Guardian
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