March 1, 2021 7:42 am
creative writing residential summer camps
creative writing lost child
paper writing service paypal
Your Ad Here
  • Home
  • News
    • Nation
    • World News
    • Districts
    • Metro
    • Accidents
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Trade
    • Industry
    • Finance
    • Manpower
    • Tourism
  • Governance
    • Democracy
    • Politics
    • Courts law
    • Military
    • Election
    • Police
    • Economy
      • Manpower
      • Employment
      • Tax
      • Stocks
      • Development
      • poverty
    • Int’l relations
      • Diplomacy
      • Human rights
      • Strategic
  • Environment
    • Natural
      • Land
      • Water
      • Air
      • Pollution
    • Biodiversity
      • Agriculture
      • Forestry
      • Fishery
      • Genetics
      • Wildlife
    • Energy
      • Conventional
      • Renewable
    • Climate
      • Adaptation
      • Mitigation
      • Global warming
      • Disasters
      • Talks
      • Treaties
  • Green corner
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Perspectives
    • Readers’ corner
    • Op-Ed
    • Think green
    • Opinion
    • Campus
    • Books
    • Laboratory
  • Feature
    • Health
      • Services
      • Medicine
      • Surgery
      • HIV/AIDS
    • Science
      • ICT Horizon
      • Telecom
      • Technology
      • Innovations
    • Femina
    • Life
    • Words of faith
    • Society
    • Family
    • Population
    • Heritage
  • Entertainment
    • Art & culture
    • Literature
    • Celebrity
    • Timeout
    • Fashion
    • Food & nutrition
    • Recipe
    • Festivals
  • Sports
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Tennis
    • Other Sports
Fishers on Kochi, Kerala operates the traditional lift-net method where catches have fallen drastically as a result of mechanised over-fishing. Credit. Manipadma Jena-IPS

UN Blueprint Could Solve Earth’s Triple Climate Emergencies

By Manipadma Jena
BHUBANESWAR, India, Feb 19 2021 (IPS) – “Our war on nature has left the planet broken. This is senseless and suicidal. The consequences of our recklessness are already apparent in human suffering, towering economic losses and the accelerating erosion of life on Earth,” António Guterres Secretary-General of the United Nations said.“By transforming how we view nature, we can recognise its true value. By reflecting this value in policies, plans and economic systems, we can channel investments into activities that restore nature and are rewarded for it,” the UN chief told the media while releasing a UN Environment Programme’s (UNEP) major new report.
Making Peace with Nature: A scientific blueprint to tackle the climate, biodiversity and pollution emergencies’ lays out the gravity of Earth’s triple environmental emergencies of climate, biodiversity loss and pollution but provides detailed solutions too by drawing on global assessments, including those from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, as well as UNEP’s Global Environment Outlook report, the UNEP International Resource Panel, and new findings on the emergence of zoonotic diseases such as COVID-19.
“Without nature’s help we will not thrive, not even survive,” Guterres cautioned.
The UN chief was, however, particularly hopeful climate and biodiversity commitment will see progress as he is set to welcome United States back to the Paris Agreement today, Feb. 19.
The “net-zero club” is growing, Inger Andersen, Executive Director of UNEP said.
“Before the COVID-19 pandemic, 2020 was emerging as a moment of truth for our commitment to steer Earth and for our commitment to steer Earth and its people toward sustainability. (But) loss of biodiversity and ecosystem integrity, together with climate change and pollution will undermine our efforts on 80 percent of assessed SDG targets particularly in poverty reduction, hunger, health, water, cities and climate,” Anderson said.
“Women represent 80 percent of those displaced by climate disruption; polluted water kills a further 1.8 million, predominantly children; and 1.3 billion people remain poor and some 700 million hungry,” Guterres said.
Christian Walzer, Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) Executive Director for Health Programs and one of the co-authors of the Making Peace with Nature report, told IPS via email: “Intact and functioning nature is the foundation on which we must build back better. Trying to separate economic recovery from healthy environments and climate change neglects the essential fact that the solutions to these crises are tightly interconnected and reinforce each other.”
He underlined how ecosystem degradation heightens the risk of pathogens making the jump from animals to humans, and the importance of a ‘One Health’ approach that considers human, animal and planetary health together. Walzer is a veterinarian who leads on One Health issues across the world.
Economic growth has brought uneven gains in prosperity to a fast-growing global population, leaving 1.3 billion people poor, while tripling the extraction of natural resources to damaging levels and creating a planetary emergency. Subsidies on fossil fuels, for instance, and prices that leave out environmental costs, are driving the wasteful production and consumption of energy and natural resources that are behind all three problems.
Guterres pointed out how governments are still paying more to exploit nature than to protect it, spending 4 to 6 trillion dollars on subsidies that damage environment. He said over-fishing and deforestation is still encouraged by countries globally because it helped GDP growth, despite drastically undermining livelihoods of local fishers and forest dwellers.
In the current growth trajectory despite a temporary decline in emissions due to the pandemic, the earth is heading for at least 3°C of global warming this century; more than 1 million of the estimated 8 million plant and animal species are at substantially increased risk of extinction; and diseases caused by pollution are currently killing some 9 million people prematurely every year.
The blueprint for solutions
The authors of Making Peace with Nature report assess the links between multiple environmental and development challenges, and explain how advances in science and bold policymaking can open a pathway towards the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030 and a carbon neutral world by 2050 while bending the curve on biodiversity loss and curbing pollution and waste.
Taking that path means innovation and investment only in activities that protect both people and nature. Success will include restored ecosystems and healthier lives as well as a stable climate.
Amid a wave of investment to re-energise economies hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, the blueprint communicates the opportunity and urgency for ambitious and immediate action. It also lays out the roles that everyone – from governments and businesses to communities and individuals – can and must play.
“2021 is a make-it or break-it year, a mind-shift year,” said Guterres. 2021, with its upcoming climate and biodiversity convention meetings, is the year where governments must come up with synergistic and ambitious targets to safeguard the planet.
To turn the tide of current unsustainability, the UNEP blueprint has several recommendations some of which include that governments include natural capital while measuring economic performance of both countries and businesses, and putting a price on carbon and shift trillions of dollars in subsidies from fossil fuels, non-sustainable agriculture and transportation towards low-carbon and nature-friendly solutions.
It is high time, the report advises, to expand and improve protected area networks for ambitious international biodiversity targets. Further, non-government organisations can build networks of stakeholders to ensure their full participation in decisions about sustainable use of land and marine resources, the report recommends.
Financial organisations need to stop lending for fossil fuels, and boost renewable energy expansion. Developing innovative finance for biodiversity conservation and sustainable agriculture is of utmost importance now.
Businesses can adopt the principles of the circular economy to minimise resource use and waste and commit to maintaining transparent and deforestation-free supply chains.
Scientific organisations can pioneer technologies and policies to reduce carbon emissions, increase resource efficiency and lift the resilience of cities, industries, communities and ecosystems
Individuals can reconsider their relationship with nature, learn about sustainability and change their habits to reduce their use of resources, cut waste of food, water and energy, and adopt healthier diets. two-thirds of global CO2 emissions are linked to households. “People’s choices matter,” Guterres said.

Related Posts

Sudanese youth live with continuous insecurity due to climate change vulnerability and food insecurity. Courtesy. Albert Gonzalez Farran- UNAMID- CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

climate, Life

The Global Insecurity of Climate Change

Mango farmers Susan and Batsirai Zinoro from Mutoko District, Zimbabwe are using Integrated Pest Management methods to control a fruit fly pest. Credit. Busani Bafana-IPS

climate, Food & nutrition

How Mango Farmers are Tackling an Invasive Fruit Fly Pest

Sir Frank Peters sirfrankpeters@gmail.com

Campus, Op-Ed

Pupil receives 282,000-tk after assault by teacher

Joyce Msuya, the Deputy Executive Director for the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), says environmental issues are development issues and therefore are everybody’s issues. Credit. Isaiah Esipisu-IPS

Environment, Op-Ed

UN Environment Assembly Calls to Make Peace with Nature

Aung San Suu Kyi

Op-Ed, Politics

Suu Kyi in Closed-Door Court sans Lawyer, Protests Continue

A smallholder woman farmer in northern Uganda with DT maize on her farm. Credit. CIMMYT

Agriculture, climate

Crop Innovation Mitigating Climate Crisis Impact in Africa

Soldiers sit inside trucks parked on a road in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Monday, Feb. 1, 2021. Myanmar military television said Monday that the military was taking control of the country for one year. AP Photo

Military, Op-Ed

Military coup in Myanmar

Studies show that glaciers in India are permanently losing ice, not only owing to higher temperatures from global warming but also in response to “deprived precipitation conditions”

climate, Disasters, Op-Ed

India Glacier Disaster: How much climate change responsible?

M Zahidul Haque

Celebrity, Op-Ed

A Tribute to King Hussein

Gail Whiteman

climate, Columns

The Arctic on the Frontlines

Olivia Grégoire

Economy, Environment, Op-Ed

Europe’s ESG Opportunity

Jules Kortenhorst

climate

Climate Hope Is Back

Latest News
Ronaldo back training at Juventus after two months

Ronaldo scores as Juventus held in Verona

Porto, Sporting battle to goalless draw in Portugal

Porto, Sporting battle to goalless draw in Portugal

Sublime Tanvir guides Emerging team to innings victory

Sublime Tanvir guides Emerging team to innings victory

Miraz expects competitive cricket to begin very soon

Felt like I was in jail: Miraz

gaibandha map

Man hurt in gas cylinder blast dies at Rangpur Hospital

We are on Facebook
[efb_likebox fanpage_url=”greenwatchbd” box_width=”262″ box_height=”250″ locale=”en_US” responsive=”1″ show_faces=”1″ show_stream=”1″ hide_cover=”0″ small_header=”0″ hide_cta=”1″ animate_effect=”No Effect” ]
  • 110210_dollars_reuters_ap_605
  • M9yGUMJ9CzT7FbDYO4JRwOEI6MY4pmivKNmAJ0Vd
  • BNP secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir.
  • BNP Flag
  • BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia taken to the court at the Old Central Jail in the Niko graft case
  • Gonoforum general secretary Reza Kibria
GreenWatch Dhaka blog

Biden embodies confidence of Americans and world at large

Glorious days: Sensational interview of man living with AIDS

Division, exclusion discarded with ideas of unity, inclusion

Glorious days: Campaign blocking waste import had life risks

Glorius days: Rare aura of unanimity seen in 1991 Parliament

News In Picture
dr chandra muzaffar
Eid Mubarak from Nobel Laureate Dr. Muhammad Yunus. Image. Yunus Centre
Mayor Sayeed Khokon speaks at a road show to raise public awareness against Dengue, Chikunguniya and other mosquito-borne diseases on Tuesday, July 23, 2019. Photo. Zabed Hasnain Chowdhury-UNB
Notre Dame Cathedral - Ramaswami Ashok Kumar - Waterwatch Yahoo Group
Election Commission logo
A visitor look at wooden royal statues of the Dahomey kingdom, dated 19th century, today's Benin,at Quai Branly museum in Paris, France, Friday, Nov. 23, 2018. (AP Photo)
election commission
Indonesia Earthquake
Islami Oikya Andolan organised a discussion and Iftar Mahfil on the historic Badr Day on Saturday
Exclusive
Queen Elizabeth II. Photo. AP

Queen’s birthday in the corona year

Mahbubul Alam 2020.6th Anniversary sirfrankpeters@gmail.com

Editor Mahbubul Alam won’t be forgotten

little cheaf

‘Little Chef’ charms Myanmar with lockdown cooking classes

kustia

Army’s vegetable procurement reduces farmers’ woes

Green Corner
Muhammad yunus. Photo- MARCELO FONSECA

Pandemic gives us opportunity to protect the world

cGpDffrAueF36PB7V7sM34rRAOXFaBY07ROhQDal

Biden embodies confidence of Americans and world at large

cGpDffrAueF36PB7V7sM34rRAOXFaBY07ROhQDal

President Abdul Hamid at Parliament opening session 2021

scout symbol

We shall Overcome Someday

Archives
March 2021
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
« Feb    

2

Greenwatch Dhaka | The leading online daily of Bangladesh
Editor: MOSTAFA KAMAL MAJUMDER

Published by:
The editor on behalf of GreenWatch Dhaka.

Publications from –
4/D, Rupayan Lotus, 13 Topkhana Road, Dhaka – 1000.
creative writing residential summer camps
Editorial Office

H-157, R-7, Journalist R/A,
Block-F,Mirpur-11, Dhaka-1216.

Learn More about Green Watch Bd

About Us | Contact Us | Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy
Contacts:
infogreenwatchbd@gmail.com,
editorgreenwatchdhaka@gmail.com,
columngreenwatchdhaka@gmail.com;
Cell: 01929334864, 01713 180002,

Phone/Fax: 8802 9034593.
GPO Box – 2559, Dhaka -1000.

3

Greenwatch Dhaka | The leading online daily of Bangladesh
  • Home
  • News
    • Nation
    • World News
    • Districts
    • Metro
    • Accidents
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Stocks
    • Trade
    • Industry
    • Finance
    • Manpower
    • Tourism
  • Governance
    • Democracy
    • Politics
    • Courts law
    • Military
    • Election
    • Police
    • Economy
      • Manpower
      • Employment
      • Tax
      • Stocks
      • Development
      • poverty
    • Int’l relations
      • Diplomacy
      • Human rights
      • Strategic
  • Environment
    • Natural
      • Land
      • Water
      • Air
      • Pollution
    • Biodiversity
      • Agriculture
      • Forestry
      • Fishery
      • Genetics
      • Wildlife
    • Energy
      • Conventional
      • Renewable
    • Climate
      • Adaptation
      • Mitigation
      • Global warming
      • Disasters
      • Talks
      • Treaties
  • Green corner
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Perspectives
    • Readers’ corner
    • Op-Ed
    • Think green
    • Opinion
    • Campus
    • Books
    • Laboratory
  • Feature
    • Health
      • Services
      • Medicine
      • Surgery
      • HIV/AIDS
    • Science
      • ICT Horizon
      • Telecom
      • Technology
      • Innovations
    • Femina
    • Life
    • Words of faith
    • Society
    • Family
    • Population
    • Heritage
  • Entertainment
    • Art & culture
    • Literature
    • Celebrity
    • Timeout
    • Fashion
    • Food & nutrition
    • Recipe
    • Festivals
  • Sports
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Tennis
    • Other Sports
Greenwatch Dhaka | The leading online daily of Bangladesh
Editor: MOSTAFA KAMAL MAJUMDER

Published by:
The editor on behalf of GreenWatch Dhaka.

Publications from –
4/D, Rupayan Lotus, 13 Topkhana Road, Dhaka – 1000.
creative writing residential summer camps
Editorial Office

H-157, R-7, Journalist R/A,
Block-F,Mirpur-11, Dhaka-1216.

Learn More about Green Watch Bd

About Us | Contact Us | Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy
Contacts:
infogreenwatchbd@gmail.com,
editorgreenwatchdhaka@gmail.com,
columngreenwatchdhaka@gmail.com;
Cell: 01929334864, 01713 180002,

Phone/Fax: 8802 9034593.
GPO Box – 2559, Dhaka -1000.