Biodiversity crisis is about to put humanity at
risk, UN scientists to warn
‘We are in trouble if we don’t act,’ say experts, with up to 1m
species at risk of annihilation
Jonathan Watts, Guardian UK
Fri 3 May 2019
The world’s leading scientists will warn the planet’s life-support
systems are approaching a danger zone for humanity when they
release the results of the most comprehensive study of life on
Earth ever undertaken.
Up to 1m species are at risk of annihilation, many within decades,
according to a leaked draft of the global assessment report, which
has been compiled over three years by the UN’s leading research
body on nature.
The 1,800-page study will show people living today, as well as
wildlife and future generations, are at risk unless urgent action
is taken to reverse the loss of plants, insects and other
creatures on which humanity depends for food, pollination, clean
water and a stable climate.
The final wording of the summary for policymakers is being
finalised in Paris by a gathering of experts and government
representatives before the launch on Monday, but the overall
message is already clear, according to Robert Watson, the chair of
the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and
Ecosystem Services (IPBES).
“There is no question we are losing biodiversity at a truly
unsustainable rate that will affect human wellbeing both for
current and future generations,” he said. “We are in trouble if we
don’t act, but there are a range of actions that can be taken to
protect nature and meet human goals for health and development.”
The authors hope the first global assessment of biodiversity in
almost 15 years will push the nature crisis into the global
spotlight in the same way climate breakdown has surged up the
political agenda since the 1.5C report last year by the UN
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Like its predecessor, the report is a compilation of reams of
academic studies, in this case on subjects ranging from ocean
plankton and subterranean bacteria to honey bees and Amazonian
botany. Following previous findings on the decimation of wildlife,
the overview of the state of the world’s nature is expected to
provide evidence that the world is facing a sixth wave of
extinction. Unlike the past five, this one is human-driven.
Mike Barrett, WWF’s executive director of conservation and
science, said: “All of our ecosystems are in trouble. This is the
most comprehensive report on the state of the environment. It
irrefutably confirms that nature is in steep decline.”
Barrett said this posed an environmental emergency for humanity,
which is threatened by a triple challenge of climate, nature and
food production. “There is no time to despair,” he said. “We
should be hopeful that we have a window of opportunity to do
something about it over these two years.”
The report will sketch out possible future scenarios that will
vary depending on the decisions taken by governments, businesses
and individuals. The next year and a half is likely to be crucial
because world leaders will agree rescue plans for nature and the
climate at two big conferences at the end of 2020.
That is when China will host the UN framework convention on
biodiversity gathering in Kunming, which will establish new
20-year targets to replace those agreed in Aichi, Japan, in 2010.
Soon after, the UN framework convention on climate change will
revise Paris agreement commitments at a meeting in either the UK,
Italy, Belgium or Turkey.
Watson, a British professor who has headed both of the UN’s
leading scientific panels, said the forthcoming report will delve
more deeply than anything before into the causes of nature
collapse, chief among which is the conversion of forests, wetlands
and other wild landscapes into ploughed fields, dam reservoirs and
concrete cities. Three-quarters of the world’s land surface has
been severely altered, according to the leaked draft. Humanity is
also decimating the living systems on which we depend by emitting
carbon dioxide and spreading invasive species.
Watson said the authors have learned from attribution science,
which has transformed the debate on the climate crisis by showing
how much more likely hurricanes, droughts and floods have become
as a result of global heating.
The goal is to persuade an audience beyond the usual green NGOs
and government departments. “We need to appeal not just to
environment ministers, but to those in charge of agriculture,
transport and energy because they are the ones responsible for the
drivers of biodiversity loss,” he said.
A focus will be to move away from protection of individual species
and areas, and to look at systemic drivers of change, including
consumption and trade.
The political environment is changing in some countries due to
overwhelming scientific evidence and increasing public concern
about the twin crises of nature and climate, which have prompted
more than 1 million students to strike from school and led to
street protests by Extinction Rebellion activists in more than a
dozen countries.
The UK parliament declared a climate emergency this week and the
government’s chief climate advisory body recommended an
accelerated plan to cut carbon emissions to zero by 2050. Until
now, however, the nature crisis has been treated as far less of a
priority. “Where are the headlines? Where are the emergency
meetings?” asked the school strike founder, Greta Thunberg, in a
recent tweet on the subject.
Extinction Rebellion activists said protests that blocked several
London streets last month were as much aimed at the defence of
nature as stabilising the climate. “They are two sides of the same
destructive coin,” said Farhana Yamin, a coordinator of the
movement who is also an environmental lawyer and formerly a lead
author of the IPCC report.
“The work of IPBES is as crucial as the work done by the IPCC on
the 1.5-degree report. That is why Extinction Rebellion is
demanding an end [to] biodiversity loss and a net-zero phaseout by
2025. We can’t save humanity by only tackling climate change or
only caring about biodiversity.”
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/may/03/climate-crisis-is-about-to-put-humanity-at-risk-un-scientists-warn