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Scientists from the United Nations’ two organizations IPCC and IPBES collaborated and made conclusions on biodiversity and climate crises.

For the first time ever, scientists from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) collaborated and made conclusions from the existing research on biodiversity and climate crises.

According to Mongabay, the release of the scientists' findings came at the same time as the G7 summit — the meeting of the leaders of the world’s major industrial nations.

The leaders are said to have acknowledged that climate and biodiversity problems have been dealt with independently so far, and that has to change.

We are seeing multiple impacts of climate change on all continents and in all ocean regions.These increasingly add to the enormous human pressure on biodiversity, which is causing its progressive loss. Every bit of warming matters, every lost species and degraded ecosystem matters.


Hans-Otto Pörtner, Co-Chair of IPCC Working Group II

In particular, scientists highlighted nature-based solutions, which can get rid of carbon in the atmosphere and give habitat to endangered species.

Let’s hope that from now on people, and our leaders will be aware that global warming and the loss of nature are the same crises and that we should fight for them together.

Marina is passionate about sustainability and works to help ensure our planet stays as our home for a long time. She takes part in environmental conservation by recycling and not buying single-use plastic.

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