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Five options for restoring global biodiversity after the UN agreement

The UN biodiversity summit COP15 in Montreal is over. Here’s what should happen next, writes researcher Henrik Svedäng in The Conversation.

Photo from The Conversation: EDGAR PHOTOSAPIENS/Shutterstock


The article “Five options for restoring global biodiversity after the UN agreement” is published on 20 December in The Conversation and is written by Henrik Svedäng, 
Researcher in Marine Ecology, Stockholm University.

He writes:
“To slow and reverse the fastest loss of Earth’s living things since the dinosaurs, almost 200 countries have signed an agreement in Montreal, Canada, promising to live in harmony with nature by 2050. The Kunming-Montreal agreement is not legally binding but it will require signatories to report their progress towards meeting targets such as the protection of 30% of Earth’s surface by 2030 and the restoration of degraded habitats.

Not everyone is happy with the settlement, or convinced enough has been promised to avert mass extinctions. Thankfully, research has revealed a lot about the best ways to revive and strengthen biodiversity – the variety of life forms, from microbes to whales, found on Earth. Here are five suggestions.”

Read the article published in The Conversation.

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