Wednesday, 7 December 2022

Greens warn UK government is going into the COP 15 summit empty handed without plans for a Rights of Nature Act.

 

Green Party co-leader Adrian Ramsey has warned that environment secretary Therese Coffey will be going into a key UN summit on biodiversity ‘empty handed because the government has failed to put forward plans to give legal protection to nature.

The UN Biodiversity Conference (COP15) will take place in the Canadian city of Montreal between the 7th and 19th of December. It brings together scientific experts and representatives of governments to agree a set of global goals to reverse nature loss [1].

Adrian Ramsey said that the environment secretary would be “attending the UN biodiversity summit empty handed, despite the UK being one of the most nature depleted countries in the world [2].

He added that there was “little confidence” in the government “meeting its target to halt the decline in species by 2030”.

Ahead of the COP 15 summit the government has faced criticism for failing to meet even its own unambitious targets in areas such as protecting threatened habitats.

Speaking to the Guardian Elliot Chapman-Jones, head of public affairs at the Wildlife Trusts said, “we are losing nature at a faster rate than at any time in our history”, yet the government’s “culture of delay” meant they were missing their targets [3].

Adding that “Current plans will mean even less wildlife in 20 years’ time than the much-depleted state that we have now. A truly ‘world leading’ target must aim to leave the next generation with more nature – not less.”

The Green Party are calling for the introduction of a Rights of Nature Act enforced by an independent Commission for Nature.

This will, Adrian Ramsey said provide “legal protection for wildlife and habitats in England and Wales”, it would also put the regeneration of nature “at the heart of all policy considerations”.

Announcing the policy in October last year Green Party spokesperson on the Natural World Jonathan Elmer said “We face an ecological emergency which threatens the survival of all life on the planet including our own. The UK is one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world with about half of its biodiversity lost” [4].

Going on to say that a “bold approach” was needed to “challenge the government and other parties to go further in addressing the tragic depletion of nature and wildlife and creating a thriving natural environment for the future.”  

Issuing this fresh call to action Adrian Ramsey said “the pace that we are losing nature continues to accelerate and there is no sign of a reversal in this trend. We face an ecological emergency which poses real threats to human society - to food and water supplies, to clean air, to our ability to adapt to a warming world”.

Adding that “If the UK government wants to demonstrate a genuine commitment to halting and reversing species decline, and avoid arriving at future biodiversity summits empty handed, it will show leadership by introducing a Rights of Nature Act.”

[1] https://www.unep.org/un-biodiversity-conference-cop-15

[2] https://www.greenparty.org.uk/news/2022/12/07/greens-call-to-extend-legal-protections-for-wildlife/?link_id=0&can_id=8bc5e413fe5b14a23ca14eb06da17776&source=email-green-party-morning-briefing-tuesday-6-december&email_referrer=email_1759856&email_subject=green-party-morning-briefing-wednesday-7-december

[3] https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/nov/28/tories-embarrassingly-poor-nature-targets-2030-labour-says

[4] https://www.greenparty.org.uk/news/2021/10/23/green-party-backs-a-rights-of-nature-act-to-give-nature-legal-rights/

 

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