S1E92: Hitting the target - can we save nature in time?

S1E92: Hitting the target - can we save nature in time?

10 Minuten

Beschreibung

vor 2 Jahren

Nations have this decade to halt and start to reverse the damage.


Synopsis: Every first and third Monday of the month, The Straits
Times analyses the beat of the changing environment, from
biodiversity conservation to climate change.


At the recent COP15 United Nations biodiversity conference in
Canada, nearly 200 nations agreed on a series of targets that aim
to halt and eventually reverse the loss of nature. The
“Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework” includes four
goals and 23 targets for achievement by 2030.


Striking the deal for nature was years in the making and urgent.
Deforestation, over-fishing, poaching, pollution and climate
change have taken a heavy toll on nature in recent decades,
leading to sharp declines in wild animal species and escalating
rates of extinctions. About a million species are at risk of
extinction, many within decades, the United Nations' biodiversity
science panel has said. 


One of the key targets agreed was conserving and managing at
least 30 per cent of the world’s land and marine areas by 2030 --
or 30 x 30. It’s a huge challenge – currently about 17 per cent
of land and 10 per cent of marine areas are under some form of
protection.


In this episode, we speak to Dr Zeng Yiwen from the Centre for
Nature-based Climate Solutions at the National University of
Singapore. Dr Zeng and his colleagues have looked at what's
needed to achieve the 30 x 30 goal and the funding needed. 


Highlights of conversation (click/tap above):


1:35 How bad are things in the natural world?


3:07 Tell us more about the 30 x 30 goal?


4:40 It's the quality, not the quantity, of the land being
conserved that matters.


7:24 What did COP15 decide on financing to help nature?


8:52 What can highly urbanised nations, such as Singapore, do to
help meet the global 30 x 30 target?


Produced by: David Fogarty (dfogarty@sph.com.sg), Ernest Luis and
Hadyu Rahim


Edited by: Hadyu Rahim


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