The UNEP report, Making Peace with Nature, lays out the gravity of these three environmental crises by drawing on global assessments,
UNEP Report Offers Blueprint for Making Peace with Nature





New Delhi (ABC Live
India): The world can transform its relationship with nature and tackle the
climate, biodiversity and pollution crises together to secure a sustainable
future and prevent future pandemics, according to a new report by the UN
Environment Programme (UNEP) that offers a comprehensive blueprint for
addressing our triple planetary emergency.
The UNEP report titled Making Peace with Nature, lays out the gravity of these three
environmental crises 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.
The authors
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.
“By bringing
together the latest scientific evidence showing the impacts and threats of the
climate emergency, the biodiversity crisis and the pollution that kills
millions of people every year, [this report] makes clear that our war on nature
has left the planet broken,” UN Secretary-General António Guterres said in the
report’s Foreword. “But it also guides us to a safer place by providing a peace
plan and a post-war rebuilding programme.
“By
transforming how we view nature, we can recognize 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,” he added. “By
recognizing nature as an indispensable ally, we can unleash human ingenuity in
the service of sustainability and secure our own health and well-being
alongside that of the planet.”
Amid a wave
of investment to re-energize 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
especially crucial, with upcoming climate and biodiversity convention meetings
- UNFCCC COP 26 and CBD COP 15 – where governments must come
up with synergistic and ambitious targets to safeguard the planet by almost
halving greenhouse gas emissions in this decade, and by conserving and
restoring biodiversity.
Tackling three planetary threats together
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. Despite a
temporary decline in emissions due to the pandemic, 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.
Environmental degradation is impeding progress towards ending poverty and
hunger, reducing inequalities and promoting sustainable economic growth, work
for all and peaceful and inclusive societies.
The report
shows how this trio of environmental emergencies interact and have common
causes, and thus can only be effectively addressed together. 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.
Inger
Andersen, Executive Director of UNEP, said the report highlighted the
importance of changing mindsets and values, and finding political and technical
solutions that measure up to the Earth’s environmental crises.
“In showing
how the health of people and nature are intertwined, the COVID-19 crisis has
underlined the need for a step-change in how we view and value nature. By
reflecting that value in decision-making – whether we are talking about
economic policy or personal choices – we can bring about a rapid and lasting
shift toward sustainability for both people and the environment,” she said.
“‘Green recovery’ plans for pandemic-hit economies are an unmissable
opportunity to accelerate the transformation.”
Released
ahead of the fifth UN
Environment Assembly, the report presents a strong case for why and
how urgent action should be taken to protect and restore the planet and its
climate in a holistic way.
It presents
examples of what transformative change can look like, and how it can create
prosperity, employment and greater equality. Far-reaching change involves
recasting how we value and invest in nature, integrating that value into
policies and decisions at all levels, overhauling subsidies and other elements
of economic and financial systems, and fostering innovation in sustainable
technologies and business models. Massive private investment in electric
mobility and alternative fuels show how whole industries recognize the
potential gains from shifting quickly.
The authors
point out that ending environmental decline in all its forms is essential to
advancing many of the Sustainable Development Goals, in particular
poverty alleviation, food and water security and good health for all. An
example is how intensifying agriculture and fishing in sustainable ways, allied
with changes in diets and lower food waste, can help end global hunger and
poverty and improve nutrition and health while sparing more land and ocean for
nature.
Reinforcing
the call for action, the report stresses the need for stakeholders at all
levels of society to be involved in decision-making, and identifies dozens of
key actions that governments, businesses, communities and individuals can and
should undertake in order to bring about a sustainable world.
For instance:
A sustainable
future also means learning from the COVID-19 crisis to reduce the threat of
pandemic diseases. The report underlines 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.