We all know the frightening environmental crisis our planet is facing. We also know that our development model is the cause. And we are beginning to understand the terrible impacts this is having on our lives, undermining social and economic progress, and even advances already made. Never has it been clearer that we need to transform what is perhaps the most crucial of our relationships: the one with nature.Ìý
Whether you are taking a biocentric or anthropocentric view of the world, it is clear that without healthy ecosystems both human and non-human life will be in jeopardy. We must act now to halt and reverse nature-loss and stabilise the climate to avoid dangerous consequences for the future of humanity, and all life on the planet. An ecological crisis is also a humanitarian crisis, exacerbating inequality and affecting the most vulnerable first and most severely.ÌýÌý
An ecological crisis is also a humanitarian crisis. We must act now to halt and reverse nature-loss and stabilise the climate to avoid dangerous consequences for the future of humanity
Evidence of our dependency on thriving nature has never been greater. is dependent on nature. A suite of ground-breaking reports have highlighted risks for food security and human health associated with nature loss and climate change.ÌýAs a consequence, environment-related risks – including inaction to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and biodiversity loss – are seen as the biggest challenges facing humanity, and growing in scale, according to the World Economic Forum's .Ìý
showed that three in four people (73%) in G20 countries agree that Earth is approaching potentially abrupt or irreversible tipping points because of human action. The recent also showed a dramatic rise in numbers of people concerned about nature loss and an undeniable shift in behaviour in response to the planetary crisis, with the most dramatic growth in concern in emerging and developing economies.
Nature and climate have never been higher on the political and corporate agendas. To date a staggering 89 Heads of State have signed the committing to reverse nature loss by 2030, and the G7 recently launched a 2030 Nature Compact; declaring that the world must achieve both net-zero emission targets and become nature-positive.
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