Major Biodiversity Conference Kicks Off In Less Than Two Weeks
Tuesday, 20 October 2020, 6:23 am Press Release: Global Landscapes Forum
Global
Landscapes Forum Biodiversity
Conference: ‘One World—One
Health’ 28 and 29 October 2020 from 9
a.m. Bonn (UTC/GMT+1)
WHAT:
Halting biodiversity loss is essential to tackle the
climate, food and global health crises, but how to turn
ambitious green
recovery pledges into concrete solutions that are
feasible to implement and fund on a large scale? In the
run-up to next year’s global biodiversity talks in Kunming
(China) and the UN Food Systems Summit, the GLF
Biodiversity Digital Conference will bring
together some of the world’s most influential
voices in the environmental, health and financial
fields to propose specific pathways for
recovery.
The event will present new
evidence and launch major reports
on issues such as the reduction of disease spillover from
wildlife to humans and the creation of a global standard on
environmental health.
It will offer a chance
to explore hot topics at the heart of 2021 talks
such as the spread of emerging diseases along wildlife value
chains; the conservation of the Amazon; the transformation
of food systems; the payment for ecosystem services; the
future of protected areas in the wake of COVID-19, and
China’s role as the host of the 2021 Biodiversity
talks.
WHEN/WHERE: Wednesday,
October 28, and Thursday, October 29, starting at 9 a.m Bonn
UTC/GMT +1. The full program is available here
and the event will take place on the conference platform
with selected content livecast on the GLF’s social media
platforms.
WHO:Elizabeth
Mrema, Executive Secretary of the UN Convention on
Biological Diversity, will open the conference. The event
will go on to explore issues at the heart of the post-2020
Biodiversity framework as well as the UN Decade on Ecosystem
Restoration, the 2021 UN Food Systems Summit and green
recovery efforts from COVID-19.
Speakers across the
two-day digital event also include:
Sir
Robert Watson, Head of the scientific advisory
group for the UNEP Global Assessments Synthesis Report.
Former Chair of Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on
Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) and the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC)
Ma Jun, Director of the
Institute of Public & Environmental Affairs (IPE),
China’s foremost environmental NGO.
Shahid
Naeem, Chair of the Department of Ecology,
Evolution, and Environmental Biology at Columbia University
and one of the world’s most cited environmental
researchers
Rodrigo A. Medellin,
Co-Chair of the Bat Specialist Group of IUCN and Senior
Professor of Ecology and Biodiversity at the National
Autonomous University of Mexico
Jennifer
Morgan, Executive Director of
Greenpeace
Mark Plotkin, President
of Amazon Conservation Team and ethnobotanist with decades
of experience in Latin America’s tropical forests. Author
of ‘Tales of a shaman’s apprentice
Benki
Piyãko, chief of the Ashaninka community leading
efforts to halt deforestation and protect indigenous
cultures in the Brazilian Amazon
Gunhild
Stordalen, Founder & Executive Chair of EAT
Foundation. EAT chairs the action track on sustainable
consumption and production of the 2021 UN Food Systems
Summit
H.E Fekadu Beyene, member of
Ethiopia’s Environment, Forest and Climate Change
Commission. Ethiopia has included ecosystem restoration in
its COVID-19 recovery package
Ren
Wang, Special Advisor at the Beijing Genomics
Institute (BGI), the world’s largest genomics
organization, with focus on agriculture and international
cooperation
Melina Sakiyama, winner
of the CBD’s MIDORI Prize for Biodiversity
2020
Global launches
include:
New White Paper and Policy
Brief: ‘Build back Better in a post-COVID world -
Reducing future wildlife-borne spillover of disease to
humans’. The two publications provide guidance on how to
tackle the drivers of zoonotic disease emergence and
recommend ways to prevent, detect and respond to future
outbreaks. Produced by the Sustainable Wildlife Management
Programme, an OACPS and EU-funded initiative implemented by
FAO, CIFOR, CIRAD and WCS.
International
journal: FAO announces the release of the new
Unasylva edition ‘Restoring the Earth: the next decade’.
It provides an overview of the progress in forest and
landscape restoration in the past decade, and outlines the
actions needed —nationally, regionally and globally— to
step up efforts in light of the UN Decade on Ecosystem
Restoration 2021-2030.
Sessions will also
cover:
Key findings of the
2020 NYDF Assessment on extractive industries and
infrastructure, to be released in November
2020.
The World Bank: the ongoing
work to develop a standard for environmental
health, similar to existing one for human and
animal health, as part of the One Health approach; insights
from the new paper ‘Finance for
Nature’; and the biodiversity-focused
Amazon Sustainable Landscapes
Program.