NATURE RECOVERY : WHY BIODIVERSITY MATTERS FOR AFRICA
The integration
of Agenda 2063 (The Africa we Want) goals and Sustainable Development Goals
into the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) is crucial to the
conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity that enhances human well-being
and development outcomes in Africa.
By Laurent
Some, Victor Nyambok, Innocent Maloba and Durrel Halleson
The upcoming United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity, COP15 (which
stands for Conference of the Parties) hosted by China will be part of a historic
opportunity to address ecological challenges facing our planet. It presents a
chance for world leaders to review the post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework
to draw a blueprint for biodiversity conservation in the next 10 years.
This week, the
first part of CBD COP15 meeting will see countries discussing the issues
surrounding nature crisis and how to tackle it. A momentous occasion for all
countries to come together to agree a plan to set nature in recovery, for
a nature-positive
world by 2030.
The final global
biodiversity agreement is scheduled to be adopted by world leaders in Kunming,
China, in April-May next year, in the concluding part of COP15.
Nature is in crisis?
Yes! We are losing
nature at a rate never seen before, as is clear from WWF’s Living Planet Report
(LPR), which found that population sizes of mammals, birds, fish, amphibians
and reptiles have seen an alarming average decline of 68% since 1970. This cannot
continue! We must stop destroying our natural world and instead restore the
biodiversity we all depend on.
For Africa, the
LPR reports an alarming 65% decline in population sizes of mammals, fish,
amphibians and reptiles.
These declines are largely driven by increasing demand on natural resources to support a growing population and global patterns of unsustainable consumption and production that lead to widespread habitat loss (45.9%), over exploitation of species (35.5%), and invasive species and disease (11.6%).
The impacts of these drivers will be magnified through globalization and
intensified under climate change.
But why is biodiversity so important?
Biodiversity is
the variety of all life on Earth.
Biodiversity and nature’s contributions in Africa are economically, socially and culturally important, essential in providing the continent’s food, water, energy, health and secure livelihood, and represent a strategic asset for sustainable development and achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals.
We are part of this huge biological web of natural organisms, which includes
everything from the tiny microorganisms that live in the soil to the iconic
elephants or pandas we seek to protect.
The total
biodiversity of our planet is immense, which is a good thing because diversity
means more resilient, and healthy, ecosystems.
Many people
today are distanced from nature and its life-giving benefits. But the reality
is that the air you breathe, the water you drink and the food you eat all
ultimately rely on biodiversity.
Biodiversity
sustains us and is the building blocks of healthy, resilient and happy
societies. We must maintain this vital source of life.
How is biodiversity sustaining me ?
We see biodiversity
every day. Some examples are plants: without our leafy friends there would be
no oxygen. Tall trees and large swathes of lush forests and rainforests, like
those in the Amazon, help stabilise the climate, playing a critical role in
carbon and water cycles.
Unknown territories - mangroves in Madagascar
There are also
less known benefits of biodiversity - things like coral reefs and mangrove
swamps provide invaluable protection from cyclones and tsunamis for people
living on coasts, while trees can absorb air pollution in urban areas.
These
environments are also home to some of the most incredible species: in
Madagascar, mangroves (small trees growing in coastal areas) provide shelter
for crabs and shrimps and homes or food for birds, sea turtles and dugongs, an
endangered marine sea mammal.
This amazing biological diversity and the benefits it provides is why leaders around the world are taking part in global meetings to protect nature and biodiversity. Join us in calling for them to secure a strong biodiversity agreement next year that reverses nature loss and delivers a sustainable future for both us and the planet! . Find out more about COP15 link
Africa policy commitments towards COP 15
WWF welcomes the
progressive work of the African Group of Negotiators on Biodiversity towards
the development of the post-2020 global biodiversity framework for adoption at
the fifteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP 15) to the
Convention on Biological Diversity.
At its recently
concluded 18th ordinary meeting, the African Ministerial Conference on the
Environment (AMCEN) called for ways to promote a biodiversity economy that can
provide economic incentives to overcome the drivers of biodiversity loss, and
supports sustainable livelihoods, business. They also stressed that
mainstreaming is an essential tool for unlocking the necessary scale of
investment in biodiversity in Africa.
The integration
of Agenda 2063 (The Africa we Want) goals and Sustainable Development Goals
into the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) is crucial to the
conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity that enhances human well-being
and development outcomes in Africa.
For the rest of
the world, the opening of COP15 is a critical opportunity for China, taking on
the CBD COP15 presidency, to lead and inspire world leaders to show political
will to reverse biodiversity loss towards a nature positive world by
2030.
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