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Greater Attention Against Wildfire, Pollution Needed

This year marks the 10th anniversary of REDD+ implementation, showcasing strides taken since the adoption of the Warsaw Framework in 2013. As 60 developing countries actively engage in activities to curb deforestation and forest degradation, the UN Climate Change secretariat witnesses a decade of significant accomplishments.

Deadly wildfires, noise pollution and other looming environmental threats could cause widespread ecological consequences, and need greater attention, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said in their latest report.

Noise Blazes and Mismatches: Emerging Issues of Environmental Concern,” the sixth UNEP report, draws attention to emerging environmental concerns with the potential to wreak regional or global havoc, if not addressed early.

UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen pointed out that the Frontiers Report identified and offered solutions to three environmental issues that merit attention and action from governments and the public at large. “Urban noise pollution, wildfires and phenological shifts – the three topics of this Frontiers report – are issues that highlight the urgent need to address the triple planetary crisis of climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss,” she said.

“This report helps us understand that learning from ecosytems and how to live within them in harmony are objectives that we all need to adopt. We cannot have a healthy society without a healthy environment. And we need good science to inform responsible policies that back a healthy environment, which the Frontiers report provides,” the UNEP chief said.

DISRUPTING NATURAL LIFE CYCLES

The latest report, released days before the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA) resumes, spotlights growing public health threats that are disrupting natural life cycles and having profound ecological consequences worldwide. “Urban noise pollution, wildfires and phenological shifts – the three topics of this Frontiers Report – are issues that highlight the urgent need to address the triple planetary crisis of climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss,” said Andersen.

KEY FINDINGS
Noise pollution in cities is a growing hazard to public health
Dangerous wildfire weather is projected to get worse
Climate change disrupts natural rhythms in plants and animals

 

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