David Attenborough leads call for world to invest $500 billion a year to
protect nature
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[October 01, 2020]
By Matthew Green
LONDON (Reuters) - British broadcaster
David Attenborough on Wednesday led a campaign by conservation groups
for the world to invest $500 billion a year to halt the destruction of
nature, saying the future of the planet was in "grave jeopardy".
Attenborough, whose new film "A Life on Our Planet" documents the
dangers posed by climate change and the extinction of species, made his
statement as the United Nations convened a one-day summit aimed at
galvanising action to protect wildlife.
"Our natural world is under greater pressure now than at any time in
human history, and the future of the entire planet – on which every
single one of us depends – is in grave jeopardy," Attenborough, 94, said
in a news release.
"We still have an opportunity to reverse catastrophic biodiversity loss,
but time is running out."
Opening the summit in New York, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres
said a million species were at risk of extinction and that climate
change and the loss of biodiversity were "destroying Earth's web of
life".
"Humanity is waging war on nature, we need to change our relationship
with it," Guterres said.
The push to redirect financing away from fossil fuels and other
polluting industries and into locally led conservation was launched by
environmental group Fauna & Flora International and backed by more than
130 organisations.
"U.N. member states must take the lead in getting ahead of this crisis
and putting funding into the hands of those who are best placed to use
it – local conservation organisations," Mark Rose, chief executive of
Fauna & Flora International, said.
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Broadcaster and film maker David Attenborough attends the premiere
of Blue Planet II at the British Film Institute in London, Britain,
September 27, 2017. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo/File Photo
The world spends an estimated $80-$90 billion on conservation each
year, but studies show that hundreds of billions of dollars may be
needed to save ecosystems from collapse.
Britain, Canada and others joined the European Union on Monday in
pledging to protect 30% of their land and seas by 2030. U.N.
officials hope to secure broad agreement on that target at talks to
forge a new global biodiversity pact due to take place in China in
2021.
Addressing the summit in a video message, Chinese President Xi
Jinping urged global cooperation on the environment, saying
countries were "passengers in the same boat".
"The loss of biodiversity and the degradation of ecosystems pose a
major risk to human survival and development," he said. "It falls to
all of us to act together, and urgently turn the Earth into a
beautiful homeland for all creatures to live in harmony."
(Additional reporting by Kate Abnett in Brussels; Editing by
Alistair Bell and Barbara Lewis)
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