By 2050, the U.S. will lose $83 billion a year because of all the nature we’ve destroyed

Fast Company

February 11, 2020
The world economy depends on nature, from coral reefs that protect coastal cities from flooding to insects that pollinate crops. But by the middle of the century, the loss of key “ecosystem services” could cost the world $479 billion each year. The U.S. will lose more than any other country, with an $83 billion loss to the GDP per year by 2050.

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How Native Tribes Are Taking the Lead on Planning for Climate Change

Yale Environment360

February 11, 2020
With their deep ties to the land and reliance on fishing, hunting, and gathering, indigenous tribes are especially vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Now, native communities across North America are stepping up to adopt climate action plans to protect their way of life.

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Why we must save endangered wetlands

The Japan Times - OpEd

February 8, 2020
It’s called the Extinction Wing. Located in a dark corner of the Paris Museum of Natural History, it houses a haunting collection of species that have long vanished from the natural world. With biodiversity declining faster than at any time in human history, what size museum will future generations need?

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The world’s oceans are speeding up — another mega-scale consequence of climate change

The Washington Post

February 5, 2020
Three-quarters of the world’s ocean waters have sped up their pace in recent decades, scientists reported Wednesday, a massive development that was not expected to occur until climate warming became much more advanced.

The change is being driven by faster winds, which are adding more energy to the surface of the ocean. That, in turn, produces faster currents and an acceleration of ocean circulation.

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Researchers emphasize that bumble bees need biodiversity

Open Access Government

February 5, 2020
Researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) found that bees prefer a low-fat diet, emphasizing that bumble bees need biodiversity to survive Bees are an important factor for our environment and our sustenance. Without insect pollination, many plant species – including various crops – cannot reproduce.

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Five takeaways from the UN’s proposals to protect biodiversity

China Dialogue

February 2, 2020
Negotiations are ramping up on a new framework for the Convention on Biological Diversity. Can they deliver a new deal for nature?

Dubbed by some “the other COP”, UN negotiations over biodiversity targets and a new international framework for nature restoration and conservation have not had the same media or political profile as those on climate change. 

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