A United Nations summit approved on Monday a landmark global deal to protect nature and direct billions of dollars toward conservation but objections from key African nations, home to large tracts of tropical rainforest, held up its final passage.
The Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, reflecting the joint leadership of China and Canada, is culmination of four years of work toward creating an agreement to guide global conservation efforts through 2030.
30-by-30 Goal
Countries at the UN-backed COP15 biodiversity conference had been negotiating a text proposed Sunday and talks addressing the finer points of the deal dragged on until Monday morning.
Delegates were able to build consensus around the deal’s most ambitious target of protecting 30 percent of the world’s land and seas by the decade’s end, a goal known as 30-by-30.
“We have huge achievements in this text now. It was huge effort to find the landing zone and get everyone on board,” EU Environment Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevicius told reporters after the deal passed.