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04 Nov 2024, 13:48
Sƶren Amelang
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Germany

UN biodiversity COP ā€œenormous step,ā€ combines climate and environment policies, says Germany

Āé¶¹ĪŽĀė°ę

The UN biodiversity conference in the Colombian city of Cali achieved real progress by improving coordination between climate and environmental protection, according to Germany’s environment ministry. ā€œIn Cali, we have succeeded in taking an enormous step forward in protecting our natural environment,ā€Ā Ā environment minister Steffi Lemke.

ā€œWith the resolution on biodiversity and the climate crisis, climate and nature conservation will be better interlinked in future through more cooperation at policy, planning and implementation level,ā€ Lemke said, adding the conference paved the way for closer cooperation between the World Biodiversity Council and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). ā€œCali thus also sends a clear signal in favour of more natural climate protection to the upcoming World Climate Conference in Baku (COP29),ā€ Lemke said.

However, Germany's cooperation and development state secretary, Jochen Flasbarth, said it was ā€œregrettableā€ that the COP16 biodiversity summitĀ Ā on a new nature conservation fund during its final session. But countries agreed on a new benefit-sharing mechanism for genetic resources, as well as a new permanent body for Indigenous peoples, which will allow them to advise and offer their view at biodiversity COPs directly for the first time.

ā€œI am particularly pleased that the voice of indigenous peoples and local communities is being strengthened – because they play an extremely important role in global biodiversity conservation,ā€ minister Lemke said.

Environmental NGO Greenpeace Germany the biodiversity conference could not be considered a major success. While the inclusion of Indigenous peoples marked a "historic" decision in environmental protection, COP16 in Colombia had revealed glaring differences between industrialised countries and developping economies, said Greenpeace policy analyst Jannes Stoppel. "The otherwise positive conference ends on a bitter note of a mutual loss of trust," Stoppel said, arguing that the EU's blocking of a fund for biodiversity highlighted this rift.

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