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Photo: Cristián Saucedo
The Global Rewilding Alliance calls on the delegates of the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity meeting in Montreal, Canada, 7-19 December, to adopt a new functional approach to safeguarding nature on the planet.
Photo: Cristián Saucedo
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) is the only legal framework globally addressing the protection, restoration, and use of nature. On December 7th-19th, the parties of the convention meet in Montreal, Canada, to finalise a Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework. This plan with goals, targets and milestones will shape the actions and financing of the nature conservation agenda for the next eight years and give direction to the work beyond in close to 200 countries.
To turn the tide on nature loss, a “Paris Agreement for Nature” has been called for. Currently only around 3 per cent of land and sea can be considered functionally intact. Restoring the web of life (functionality of ecosystems) and allowing healthy animal populations – rewilding – will therefore be required for our land, freshwater and seas.
Such an approach will not only help the large-scale recovery of nature required for the planet. It will also help humanity to turn the negative trend on climate change due to the interdependence of biodiversity and climate: Restoring the functional role of marine fish, whales, elephants, wolves, sharks, bison, and other wildlife species can in fact be the game changer by magnifying carbon uptake by 1.5 to 12.5 times across the world’s terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems – a process called “(Re)-animating the carbon cycle”. In fact, without mobilising nature through reanimating the carbon cycle we will not be able to avoid a climate breakdown!
The Global Rewilding Alliance is asking the delegates and governments assembling at the CBD COP15 to:
About Global Rewilding Alliance
Anchored in the Global Charter for Rewilding the Earth: Advancing nature-based solutions to the extinction and climate crises, the Global Rewilding Alliance was founded by The Wild Foundation and Re:wild in 2020. The network of currently 130+ organisations work across Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, Latin America, North America and globally to rewild more than 100 million hectares of land and sea in 70+ countries. Our goal for 2030 is that rewilding has become mainstream in science, policy and practice and is recognised globally as being credible, practical and inspiring: a key approach for people, nature and climate.