BFF-02 Saving Nature key to human wellbeing: UN biodiversity chief

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Saving Nature key to human wellbeing: UN biodiversity chief

PARIS, May 1, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – The degradation of Nature threatens mankind
just as much as climate change, Robert Watson, outgoing head of the UN
science panel for biodiversity, has warned ahead of a stark assessment of the
state of our planet.

The former head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Watson
has a unique perspective on how global warming and biodiversity loss — two
of the most pressing problems humanity faces — overlap and exacerbate each
other.

He spoke to AFP ahead of the unveiling Monday of a UN assessment of Nature
— the first in 15 years — written by 150 scientists and drawing from 15,000
published studies and government reports.

– Threat to social cohesion –

Q. Is the destruction of Nature as much of a threat to humanity as climate
change?

A. Degrading Nature affects food and water security, the regulation of
climate, even social cohesion. It threatens human wellbeing at least as much
as climate change, and the causes and solutions for both overlap.

The way we produce food and energy undermines the “services” we get from
Nature that protect us against air pollution and floods.

The long-term degradation of soils and lost soil microbes will compromise
food production, and the availability of clean water. Then there is the loss
of pollination services, which threatens crops worth hundreds of billions of
dollars each year.

– 20 percent of species threatened –

Q. Are we entering a “mass extinction event”?

A. In each of the five previous mass extinctions, we lost about 75 percent
of species. If you accumulate species loss over the last 500 years, we have
lost two percent at most.

Data and records suggest about 20 percent of species are threatened with
extinction over the next 100 years. If we were to lose an additional 20
percent every 100 years, you might see a mass extinction in 250-500 years.

If only the critically threatened species vanished by the end of this
century, and extinctions continued at that rate, it would take between 900
and 2,300 years to reach the 75 percent threshold.

So we might be at the beginning or moving toward a sixth mass extinction,
but there is a long way to go before you could say we are fully in one.

– A consumption issue –

Q. What are the main causes of species decline?

A. The five main drivers of biodiversity loss are land use change
(including agriculture), over-exploitation (mostly hunting for food),
invasive alien species, pollution and climate change. There are also two big
indirect drivers: the number of people in the world and consumption per
capita.

By 2050, the population will go up from 7.5 to 9.5 or 10 billion, and by
the end of the century plausibly to 11 billion. At the same time, world
economic growth will double or triple by 2050. Developed countries will only
increase one or two percent per year in GDP. The economies of developing
countries are likely, on average, to grow by four percent.

So you will have more people who consume more — the richer they are, the
more food, energy and water they want. So it is not just a population issue,
it is a consumption issue.

Q. Does that mean global consumer capitalism is incompatible with climate
change and biodiversity goals?

A: I don’t necessarily believe they are inconsistent, but the question is;
how do we ensure sustainable production and consumption with a growing and
wealthier population? How do we make sure our food system, and our demand for
clean water, is sustainable? Can we feed the world, with a good choice of
food, without destroying Nature and changing Earth’s climate?

There are ways we can bring all this together, but it will require
transformative change. We can’t carry on exactly the way we’re going at the
moment. We should not be using GDP as the sole measure of economic growth.

But if you tell people we have to decrease living standards, they are going
to say “wait a second, I’m not going to diminish my living standard even
though it may affect my children and grandchildren”.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0829 hrs