As countries continue to grapple with the consequences of a worldwide pandemic, the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA) will meet virtually from 22 – 23 February. In its fifth session, UNEA – the world’s highest environmental decision-making body – will bring together Ministers and policy-makers representing 193 Member States as well as scientists, leaders from civil society and the private sector. Leadership Dialogues, hosted virtually, will consider environmental aspects of sustainable development and how they can be used to shape a more resilient and inclusive post-pandemic world. In particular, representatives will discuss ways to ensure that environmental issues remain a top priority; sustain political will and momentum to restore nature; and define the role of UNEP in driving the process.
In 2020, UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres warned that “Humanity is waging a war on nature”, emphatic that our existing systems of consumption and production are unsustainable. As we destroy ecosystems, he explained, we are effectively destroying ourselves. Largely attributable to conditions created by excessive extraction and consumption of nature, zoonotic diseases – diseases that enter into the human population through an animal source – are on the rise everywhere in the world. Unsustainable consumption has had a devastating impact on the world’s ecosystems, propelling climate change, destroying nature, and raising pollution levels. To view the full article visit the UNEP.