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UNESCO at the IUCN World Conservation Congress

26/08/2021
15 - Life on Land

As part of its partnership with LVMH, UNESCO will host a pavilion at the IUCN World Conservation Congress (Marseille, France, 3-11 September). The pavilion, will reflect the shared fundamental conviction that because biodiversity is the basis for life on Earth, they must act together within the World Network of Biosphere Reserves of the Man and the Biosphere (MAB) Programme to define better ways of living together in harmony with nature and to implement the Sustainable Development Goals of the 2030 Agenda.

There is only one planet: not one for nature and another one for human beings. The pandemic raised awareness of our interdependence with the living world. Biodiversity, the climate crisis and well-being are interconnected so we must find solutions to foster a better cohabitation between nature and humans, share knowledge and equip youth with the skills and values needed to live in harmony with all living beings.

The  IUCN World Conservation Congress  will be a key milestone for nature conservation and the development of a new global framework for biodiversity, ahead of the Convention of the Parties to the Convention for Biological Diversity.

The pavilion’s four areas tell the story of how UNESCO and LVMH act together for biodiversity, to reconcile humans with nature and protect, share and transmit the beauty and richness of life on earth.

In its center lays ‘Wither’, a monumental visual and sound installation by Thijs Biersteker that reacts to real-time deforestation data. Thijs Biersteker’s immersive art installations – often described as eco–or awareness art, turn the impact of topics like climate change, air pollution, ocean plastic and the anthropocene into tangible experiences that travel the world to raise awareness around these topics.

UNESCO will coordinate four sessions during the Congress :

Additionally, UNESCO’s Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission will organize a public event in the context of the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development entitled “The Ocean Decade: Co-Designing Knowledge for Global Marine Biodiversity Recovery”. It will be held in the Ocean and Islands Pavilion and will highlight the importance of improved ocean knowledge to meet global biodiversity goals.

     

    Acting for biodiversity

    UNESCO supports and provides resources in advocacy for the meaningful engagement and leadership of global youth in biodiversity conservation and sustainable development, both in programming, practice and decision-making. The organization is committed to making this inclusion of young people genuine and based on the principle of intergenerational equity which involves all generations coming together effectively to support young leaders, while honoring the wisdom of elders and elders.

    UNESCO invites a full reconciliation with the living, where 100% of humans become responsible and therefore protectors / guardians of our planet. Ongoing negociations for the post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework propose a target to preserve 30% of the planet in protected areas. UNESCO invites a reconcilation with Nature beyond this 30% target, as we cannot continue business as usual in the remaining 70%. This is already a reality in UNESCO Biosphere Reserves as sustainable models of life in harmony with nature. UNESCO Biosphere Reserves already cover more than 5% of the earth's surface and act as another effective area-based conservation measure (OECM).

    UNESCO-designated sites are part of the solution and can significantly contribute to achieving the target of preserving 30% of the planet as protected areas by 2030. Even more importantly, its global network of 714 biosphere reserves in 129 countries, building on the MAB programme's experience over 50 years, must serve as models of sustainable development in harmony with nature on the 70% of the planet not covered by protected areas, to achieve the SDGs.

    More information: