The Guardian Australia

Australia signs global nature pledge committing to reverse biodiversi­ty loss by 2030

- Lisa Cox

The Australian government has signed a global pledge endorsed by more than 90 countries committing them to reversing biodiversi­ty loss by 2030.

The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, announced Australia had joined the Leaders’ Pledge for Nature at an event taking place on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York.

In a video message, he said Australia’s approach to environmen­tal challenges had changed and the government understood climate change and the global loss of biodiversi­ty were dual crises.

“This highlights Australia’s reinvigora­ted approach to protecting our environmen­t and climate leadership and signals our solidarity with other world leaders in our commitment to taking strong action on the dual crises of biodiversi­ty loss and climate change,” he said.

The Leaders’ Pledge for Nature is the same document the Morrison government refused to sign in 2020 because it called for commitment­s that were inconsiste­nt with Australia’s policies at the time, including greater ambition to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The pledge was developed by the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), Belize, Bhutan, Colombia, Costa Rica, the EU, Finland, Kenya, Seychelles, the UK and an alliance of organisati­ons.

Countries that have endorsed the pledge have promised actions including stronger global effort to reduce deforestat­ion, halting unsustaina­ble fishing practices, eliminatin­g environmen­tally harmful subsidies, and beginning the transition to sustainabl­e food production systems and a circular economy during the next decade.

The document promises action to reduce biodiversi­ty loss and stop human-caused extinction­s of other species.

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In December, countries will meet in Montreal for global talks aimed at securing a new global agreement for nature that has been likened to the Paris agreement for climate change.

Albanese told the event in New York that Australia understood “the urgency of the environmen­tal challenges facing our planet and we’re committed to being a leader in the global fight to solve them”.

He noted Australia’s important position as one of only a handful of megadivers­e countries that comprised 10% of the Earth’s surface but were home to more than 70% of its species.

“Working together we can better protect and conserve the world’s land, sea, waterways and cultural heritage for future generation­s,” he said. “Now is the time to act.”

WWF-Australia’s chief executive, Dermot O’Gorman, said the new government had signalled to other countries that the environmen­t was back as a priority for Australia.

“We look forward to working with the government to ensure this pledge translates into action that helps regenerate Australia and supports our neighbours in the Asia Pacific,” he said.

O’Gorman said Australia’s internatio­nally prized landscapes were deteriorat­ing and the country’s land-clearing and extinction rates were among the highest in the developed world.

The five-yearly State of the Environmen­t report found the health of Australia’s environmen­t was poor and deteriorat­ing and at least 19 ecosystems were showing signs of collapse.

“We are on the frontline of the escalating nature crisis and we can play a global leadership role in addressing it,” O’Gorman said.

The chief executive of the Australian Conservati­on Foundation, Kelly O’Shanassy, said the prime minister’s announceme­nt was promising.

“We see Mr Albanese’s involvemen­t as an indication that the federal government will start to take the biodiversi­ty crisis seriously,” she said.

She called on Albanese and the environmen­t minister, Tanya Plibersek, to attend the UN biodiversi­ty conference (Cop15) in Montreal in December.

“At present, Australia is failing to meet its internatio­nal obligation­s,” she said. “Conservati­on efforts are hugely underfunde­d and only 100 of Australia’s more than 1,900 listed threatened species and communitie­s are prioritise­d for recovery action.”

 ?? Photograph: blickwinke­l/Alamy ?? The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has said Australia is committed to taking action on the dual crises of biodiversi­ty loss and climate change.
Photograph: blickwinke­l/Alamy The prime minister, Anthony Albanese, has said Australia is committed to taking action on the dual crises of biodiversi­ty loss and climate change.

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