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Conservation targets need billions in funding

Scientists say billions required to meet conservation targets

 
Ethiopian bush crow
 
The most threatened species tend to be relatively cheap to save because of small range sizes.
 

Reducing the risk of extinction for

threatened species and establishing protected areas for nature will cost the world over $76bn dollars annually.

Researchers say it is needed to meet globally agreed conservation targets by 2020.

The scientists say the daunting number is just a fifth of what the world spends on soft drinks annually.

And it amounts to just 1% of the value of ecosystems being lost every year, they report in the journal Science.

“Nature just doesn't do recessions, we're talking about the irreversible loss of unique species and millions of years of evolutionary history”

Donal McCarthy RSPB

Back in 2002, governments around the world agreed that they would achieve a significant reduction in biodiversity loss by 2010. But the deadline came and went and the rate of loss increased.

At a meeting of the Convention on Biological Diversity in Nagoya that year governments re-committed to a series of targets to be achieved by 2020.

The Anthropocene - Humans Shaping the Planet

 
Construction site in Egypt      

 

At the Planet Under Pressure conference in London, Diana Liverman and Will Steffen present something of a contrasting couple.

The two professors have been working together on a State of the Planet

report, which has involved trawling through numerous reports and scientific

papers. At the end of it all, the message of one appears somewhat optimistic,

the other fundamentally pessimistic.

They agree that changes to the world since about 1950 have been startling -

rapid spread of the human population, accelerating exploitation of forests and

marine resources, surging economic growth in successive waves across the world,

and so on.

This radical reshaping of the natural world by a single species is certainly

unprecedented in Earth history, which a few years back led to scientists Paul

Crutzen and Eugene Stoermer coining a special name for our epoch - the Anthropocene.

If you accept the premise that we have entered the Anthropocene, one of the

over-arching questions is "what happens now?"; another is "can we get out of

it?"

Prof Liverman, who studies social aspects of global change at the University

of Arizona, has the task of assessing the societal trends that either indicate

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