By Tom Miles
GENEVA, May 15 (Reuters) - Biodiversity has decreased by an
average of 28 percent globally since 1970 and the world would
have to be 50 percent bigger to have enough land and forests to
provide for current levels of consumption and carbon emissions,
conservation group WWF said on Tuesday.
Unless the world addresses the problem, by 2030 even two
planet Earths would not be enough to sustain human activity, WWF
said, launching its "Living Planet Report 2012", a biennial
audit of the world's environment and biodiversity - the number
of plant and animal species.
Yet governments are not on track to reach an agreement at
next month's sustainable development summit in Rio de Janeiro,
WWF International's director general Jim Leape said.
"I don't think anyone would dispute that we're nowhere near
where we should be a month before the conference in terms of the
progress of the negotiations and other preparations," Leape told
reporters in Geneva.
"I think all of us are concerned that countries negotiating
in the U.N. system for an outcome for Rio have not yet shown a
willingness to really step up to meet these challenges. Those
negotiations are clearly still tangled."
The Rio+20 meeting on June 20-22 is expected to attract more
than 50,000 participants, with politicians under pressure from
environmentalists to agree goals for sustainable development, in
the spirit of the Rio Earth Summit that spawned the Kyoto
Protocol 20 years ago.
Despite that pact aimed at cutting planet-warming carbon
emissions, global average temperatures are on track for a
"catastrophic increase" by the end of the century, WWF said.
Leape said there were many initiatives governments could
take unilaterally without being "held hostage" to the wider
negotiations for a binding global climate deal to replace Kyoto,
which expires this year.
It said the world should move away from "perverse" subsidies
on fossil fuels that amount to more than $500 billion annually
and ensure global access to clean energy by 2030.
Asked why environmentalists were still struggling to win the
argument that something needed to be done, Leape said: "Let's
not underestimate the inertia in the system.
"We've built an economy over the last century that is built
on fossil fuels and on a premise that the Earth's resources
could not be exhausted. You see that conspicuously in the case
of the oceans, where we've been taking fish as if there were no
tomorrow, as if fish would just always be there.
"Secondly, we're doing it in the context of a marketplace
that continues to send the wrong signals. So many of the costs
that we're talking about are not built into the prices you see
... Markets can work well if prices are telling the truth but at
the moment they don't, in hugely important ways."
Consumers were helping to turn the tide, he said, because of
certification regimes that give products a seal of approval,
forcing companies to abide by certain standards.
"You see a growing number of commodities in which this
approach is rolling out. It's in timber, it's in fish, but it's
also now in palm oil and in sugar and in cotton and so forth. I
think that's part of creating market signals, to allow consumers
to send signals, to show their preferences and to actually begin
to build a market that's heading towards sustainability."
(Editing by Janet Lawrence)
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