Global biodiversity targets won't be met by 2020, scientists say

10-02-2014

Adam Vaughan

the Guardian

World leaders are failing in their pledge to cut the rate at which wildlife lose their homes, according to the the first ever progress report on targets to slow biodiversity loss by the end of the decade. Conservationist called the lack of action a '€œtroubling sign'€ and a '€œreality check'€.

Governments agreed on a set of targets in 2010 to stem the destruction of species'€™ habitats, increase the number of nature reserves and stop overfishing, but an international team of more than 30 scientists say in a report that, almost halfway towards the 2020 deadline, the Aichi targets are unlikely to be met.

Writing in the journal Science, in the same week that a major report by WWF suggested the world had lost half its animals over the past four decades, the scientists say that the state of biodiversity and the pressures on it are getting worse, not better.

A pledge to halve the loss of natural habitats by 2020 will be missed, as will an attempt to reduce fishing to sustainable levels, and a target of having 10% of the world'€™s seas made into protected areas.

Dr Richard Gregory, one of the paper'€™s authors and head of species monitoring and research at the RSPB, said: '€œWorld leaders are currently grappling with many crises affecting our future. But this study shows there is a collective failure to address the loss of biodiversity, which is arguably one of the greatest crises facing humanity.

'€œThe natural environment provides us with food, clean water and other natural resources we need for survival, and much more besides to feed our souls and inspire us.'€

He called the lack of progress a '€œa troubling sign for us all.'€

If the 2020 targets are missed, it will not be the first time targets to halt the decline in the richness and abundance of wildlife and the natural world have been overshot. An assessment of goals set in 2002 to cut the rate of biodiversity loss by 2010 showed governments had failed to deliver on the commitments they made.

Mike Hoffmann, a senior scientist on species survival commission at the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, told the Guardian that '€œthis is a reality check halfway to 2020.'€

'€œWe'€™re in serious danger of being in the same position as we were back in 2010 of not having made the progress we need to make to lead to a better society and a better world.

'€œIt'€™s not to say we'€™re not having successes. We don'€™t do enough to champion the conservation successes, without which we'€™d be in a much worse situation.'€

But, he said: '€œThe bottom line is we'€™re not doing enough and we'€™re going to have to do much much more to change things in the next five things.'€

The new analysis of progress on the 2020 targets did say that society'€™s awareness of the problem had improved and efforts to raise funds to tackle the problem were accelerating but not significantly enough. The team looked at 55 indicators to measure the health of biodiversity worldwide, to measure progress on 16 of the 20 Aichi targets agreed in 2010.

'€œThe benefits of maintaining biodiversity are well known,'€ the report concludes, '€œ... efforts need to be redoubled to positively affect trajectories of change and enable global biodiversity goals to be met by the end of the current decade.'€

Officials from nearly a nearly 200 countries are to meet in Pyeongchang, South Korea, over the next fortnight, to discuss how to tackle the problem.