Nearly 200 Countries Agree to Conserve 30% of Planet for Nature at UN Summit

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Representatives from almost 200 nations agreed to set a target of conserving 30% of the Earth’s surface for nature by 2030 at the United Nations’ COP15 biodiversity summit in Montreal, Canada.  

Key Facts: The global targets for 2030 also included investing at least $200 billion per year from both public and private sources, eliminating at least $500 billion per year in subsidies harmful to biodiversity, restoring 30% of degraded ecosystems, reducing risk from pesticides by at least 50%, and reducing the rate of introduction and establishment of invasive alien species by at least 50%. The countries also set a goal of stopping the extinction of known species and reducing the extinction risk of all species to 10% of current levels. 

For Context: While the agreement is not a guarantee that targets will be met, it represents a major commitment, with some officials comparing it to the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement. However, the United States could not join the agreement because it is not a party to the Convention on Biological Diversity, which congressional Republicans have blocked. Species and ecosystems face mounting challenges worldwide; recent studies have found that North America has lost about 29% of its birds since 1970, with one in eight bird species facing extinction worldwide. 

How the Media Covered It: While coverage was common in major left and center-rated outlets Monday morning, it was mostly absent from right-rated outlets, which tend to focus less on international stories. Many headlines called the agreement “historic,” sometimes quoting diplomats who used the same language. 

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Negotiators reached a historic deal at a U.N. biodiversity conference early Monday that would represent the most significant effort to protect the world’s lands and oceans and provide critical financing to save biodiversity in the developing world.

The global framework comes on the day the United Nations Biodiversity Conference, or COP15, is set to end in Montreal. China, which holds the presidency at this conference, released a new draft on Sunday that gave the sometimes contentious talks much-needed momentum.

Nations have agreed to protect a third of the planet for nature by 2030 in a landmark deal aimed at safeguarding biodiversity.

There will also be targets for protecting vital ecosystems such as rainforests and wetlands and the rights of indigenous peoples.

The agreement at the COP15 UN biodiversity summit in Montreal, Canada, came early on Monday morning.

The summit had been moved from China and postponed due to Covid.

Countries have pledged to protect 30 per cent of the world's lands, seas, coasts and inland waters by 2030 as part of a new deal that aims to halt declines in nature.

Measures agreed at the UN Cop15 conference in Montreal also include a pledge to increase the flow of finance to developing nations to care for nature to $20 billion (£16.5 billion) by 2025 and at least $30 billion (£24.7 billion) by 2030.