MONTREAL / BIODIVERSITY CONFERENCE EXTERIORS
06-Dec-2022
00:00:59
The UN’s key biodiversity conference, COP15, began on Tuesday in Montreal, Canada, where negotiators will set new targets and goals aimed at arresting the alarming destruction of nature, due by human activity. UNIFEED
Subject to the Terms of Usages of UNifeed, UNifeed materials are available free of charge for news purposes only. UNifeed materials may not be sold or redistributed to third parties without the prior written consent of the UN or the UN entity which is source of the UNifeed material. All users of UNifeed materials must provide due credit to the United Nations or any UN entity source(s) in their use and broadcast of UNifeed materials.
Size
Format
Acquire
DESCRIPTION
STORY: MONTREAL / BIODIVERSITY CONFERENCE EXTERIORS
TRT: 0:59
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: NATS
DATELINE: 06 DECEMBER 2022, MONTREAL, CANADA
TRT: 0:59
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: NATS
DATELINE: 06 DECEMBER 2022, MONTREAL, CANADA
SHOTLIST
1. Wide shot, exterior, COP15 venue
2. Close up, COP15 sign
3.Various shots, COP15 Venue
4. Various shots, COP15 participants
2. Close up, COP15 sign
3.Various shots, COP15 Venue
4. Various shots, COP15 participants
STORYLINE
The UN’s key biodiversity conference, COP15, began on Tuesday in Montreal, Canada, where negotiators will set new targets and goals aimed at arresting the alarming destruction of nature, due by human activity.
The conference is being billed as a major biodiversity COP, because it is expected to lead to the adoption of a new Global Biodiversity Framework, guiding actions worldwide through 2030, to preserve and protect our natural resources.
The delegates and organizers will be hoping that this framework will have a more lasting impact than the previous version: at COP10, in 2010, governments agreed to strive for ambitious targets by 2020, including halving natural habitat loss, and implementing plans for sustainable consumption and production.
However, a UN report released that year, showed that not a single target had been fully met. Meanwhile, the planet is experiencing its largest loss of life since the dinosaur era ended: one million plant and animal species are now threatened with extinction.
The conference is being billed as a major biodiversity COP, because it is expected to lead to the adoption of a new Global Biodiversity Framework, guiding actions worldwide through 2030, to preserve and protect our natural resources.
The delegates and organizers will be hoping that this framework will have a more lasting impact than the previous version: at COP10, in 2010, governments agreed to strive for ambitious targets by 2020, including halving natural habitat loss, and implementing plans for sustainable consumption and production.
However, a UN report released that year, showed that not a single target had been fully met. Meanwhile, the planet is experiencing its largest loss of life since the dinosaur era ended: one million plant and animal species are now threatened with extinction.
Category
Topical Subjects
Geographic Subjects
Source
Alternate Title
unifeed221206d