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Tackle Biodiversity Loss, Climate Change Together for A Better Tomorrow

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Biodiversity loss and climate change, both driven by human activities will never be successfully resolved unless both are tackled together, according to a group of leading biodiversity and climate experts.

The experts’ came out with the message during a four-day virtual workshop by the Intergovernmental Science Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).   This is the first-ever collaboration between these two intergovernmental bodies.

The experts viewed that previous policies largely tackled biodiversity loss and climate change independently. They opined that addressing the synergies between mitigating biodiversity loss and climate change, while considering their social impacts, offers the opportunity to maximize benefits and meet global development goals.

Scientific Steering Committee of Experts co-chair Prof. Hans-Otto Pörtner pointed out that human caused climate change was increasingly threatening nature. He cautioned; “the warmer the world gets, the less food, drinking water and other key contributions nature can make to our lives, in many regions.”

Portner noted that a sustainable global future for people and nature is still achievable, but required transformative change with rapid and far-reaching actions of a type never before attempted, building on ambitious emissions reductions.

In the study, the authors warn of narrowly focused actions to combat climate change directly and indirectly harming nature and vice-versa. However, they talk of many measures that exist for making significant positive contributions in both areas.

IMPORTANT ACTIONS IDENTIFIED 
CLIMATE MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION MEASURES

The report points out that various options for mitigating and adapting to climate change exists. However, these can have large negative environmental and social impacts – such as interference with migratory species and habitat fragmentation, the report added.

The authors maintain that nature offers effective ways to help mitigate climate change. Nevertheless, these solutions can only be effective if they are built on ambitious reductions in all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions.

IPBES Chair Ana María Hernández Salgar pointed out that land and ocean are already doing a lot – absorbing almost 50 per cent of Carbon dioxide from human emissions. However, nature cannot do everything, she added.

“Transformative change in all parts of society and our economy is needed to stabilize our climate, stop biodiversity loss and chart a path to the sustainable future we want. This will also require us to address both crises together, in complementary ways,” said IPCC chair Dr. Hoesung Lee.

“Climate change and biodiversity loss combine to threaten society – often magnifying and accelerating each other. By focusing on synergies and trade-offs between biodiversity protection and climate change mitigation and adaptation, this workshop advanced the debate on how to maximize benefits to people and the planet. It also represented an important step in collaboration between our two communities,” he said.

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