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A major UN conference on biodiversity
ended in Bonn on Friday with new measures to protect diverse species on
Earth. (File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BERLIN, May 30 (Xinhua) -- A major UN conference on
biodiversity ended in Bonn on Friday with new measures to protect diverse
species on Earth.
Among the outcomes of the two-week meeting were
initiatives announced by countries like Indonesia, Malaysia, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Bosnia and Brazil to earmark tens of millions of hectares for
nature preserves.
The host country Germany has launched an initiative
to set up an internet-based "Life Web" to link countries offering protected
areas with countries prepared to fund them.
Although the conference failed to establish rules to
compensate developing nations for genetic resources extracted by rich nations
for use in medicines and cosmetics, it has produced a plan for the negotiations
of an agreement expected to be reached at the next UN biodiversity conference in
the Japanese city of Nagoya in 2010.
Delegates also agreed to take a more definitive stand
on biofuels at the next round of talks in Nagoya and called for the development
of sound policy frameworks on biofuels whose mass production may put strain on
crop and forest land.
The 191 participating countries also agreed on a
de-facto ban on the practice of seeding the ocean with nutrients to encourage
growth of algae in the hope of absorbing carbon dioxide. Opponents have argued
the little-tested process has unknown risks which could damage marine life.
The conference also secured more financial support
for forest protection, with Germany committing 500 million euro (about 775
million U.S. dollars) over the next four years for this purpose and another 500
million euro each year after that.
Norway also announced plans to spend 600 million
euros on forest conservation annually for the next three years.
A major task of the ninth conference of the
Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) is
to review the goals set in 2002 at the UN Earth Summit, which called for slowing
the loss of biological diversity by 2010.
According to Ahmed Djoghlaf, Executive Secretary of
the CBD, the world is losing plant and animal species at a rate between 100-1000
times the natural extinction rates.
The loss of species diminishes the genetic resources
needed for medical advances, to assure a secure food supply, and to ensure that
the world's ecosystems can provide the necessary functions that are essential
for life, he said.
"We are less than two years from 2010, the year that
Heads of State and Government determined to be the target for substantially
reducing the rate of loss of biodiversity. These agreements - the Bonn
Biodiversity Compact - if implemented expeditiously by all stakeholders, will go
a long way to help us meet our goals," he said.
Critics, however, argued that the meeting has failed
to produce a clear roadmap to achieve the 2010 target.
"I fear for the future of the convention unless
something rather dramatic happens to it," said Gordon Shepard, policy director
of the World Wildlife Fund.