This Giving Tuesday…
Conservation Biology Institute is launching a new initiative to support wildfire risk reduction, and we need your help.
We have partnered with the Colombian National Firefighting Academy, to establish a Latin American Center for Biological Conservation and Forest Operations. The center will develop novel wildfire research, consolidate existing scientific knowledge and data, educate community members on wildfire risk reduction and response, as well as train firefighters in the latest wildfire management approaches.
While it may seem far away to you, the Amazon Basin is a critical part of the health of the entire planet. Not only is it the most biodiverse region on earth, but it also is one of the planet’s largest carbon sinks, storing 150B metric tons of carbon, equivalent to 10 years worth of global fossil fuel emissions. Even if the world reduced human-caused emissions enough to get on track to fulfill the Paris Climate Agreement, keeping global warming below a 1.5-degree-C increase from pre-industrial levels, a sudden loss of the Amazon and its stored carbon would put that target out of reach.
Facing unprecedented severity and frequency of fires, in ecosystems that are not fire-adapted, biodiversity in the Latin American and Caribbean region has taken a huge hit. Scientists estimate that as many as 17 million vertebrates died in the 2020 Brazil paramos fires, and the World Wildlife Fund’s Living Planet Report estimates that there has been a 95% decline in the size of monitored wildlife populations in the LAC region over just 50 years (1970-2020).
The value of cooperation among researchers, fire management agencies, community leaders, policymakers, and industry in developing and adopting science-based approaches is more important than ever in increasing wildfire resiliency for both communities and nature. Please contribute today. Those who donate $50 or more will have the opportunity to attend a series of exclusive presentations led by our top scientists and researchers! Donors of $100 or more will also receive recognition on our website (optional)!
CBI’s Robin Jones– Executive Director, Dr. Alexandra Syphard– Senior Research Scientist, and Karl Peet– Senior Advisor, Global Strategy, spent October 21st, 2024 – November 1st, 2024 participating in the 16th Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (COP16) in Cali, Colombia.
Just prior to the kickoff of the conference, World Wildlife Fund released its Living Planet Report with dismaying news that in the past 50 years, over 70% of wildlife on the planet has been lost, with more than 95% loss experienced in the Latin American and Caribbean region. The urgency of all attendees in finding and implementing creative solutions was palpable throughout the event.
While in Cali, CBI co-hosted three well-attended panel discussion events and a workshop, both composed of international practitioners with deep experience in various fields. While the amount of material covered in each discussion was vast, the following highlights some insightful elements from each event.
On Thursday, October 24th,
we co-hosted our first COP16 panel discussion with Despacio, SabidurAI, and World Resources Institute, entitled, “Leveraging Traditional Knowledge and Modern Technology to Reduce Tropical Deforestation, ‘Ghost Road’ Expansion, and Habitat Fragmentation”, we explored the complexity of issues associated with the buildout of linear infrastructure and its costs and benefits to both humans and biodiversity. We saw an impressive demonstration of advances in remote sensing and artificial intelligence that can provide a far more accurate representation of new road expansion than has been available to scientists and ecologists in the past, and showed just how quickly road expansion is happening in places such as the Congo Basin. Projeto Reconecta and the Smithsonian National Zoo/Conservation Biology Institute gave us a sneak peek at recent research on the efficacy in man-made crossing bridges in reducing the incidence of fauna death due to vehicle collisions.
Participants heard two distinctly different perspectives on road expansion, one from Association of Saamaka Traditional Authorities in Suriname, and one from Indigenous-owned Native Root Coffee in Colombia. The Saamaka people have historically settled along and navigated exclusively by river, and road incursion has been a largely negative development, damaging and leading to deforestation of large swaths of their sacred lands. Native Root, on the other hand, recognizes the negative impact that linear infrastructure buildout has on their ecosystem, but they are also dependent upon these roads in order to get their product to market. The discussion that ensued among our panelists and the audience was vibrant and complex.
On Friday, October 25th,
we co-hosted our second COP16 panel discussion with CREAF entitled “Global Challenges to Sustaining Biodiversity in an Era of Changing Fire Regimes”, in which our panelists highlighted the rapid changes in wildfire patterns across the globe from historic fire regimes, and the impact on biodiversity as a result. CBI’s Dr. Alexandra Syphard set the stage by contrasting two distinct ecosystems: montane forests that are adapted for and dependent on relatively frequent fire on the landscape, and mediterranean chaparral which has historically experienced relatively infrequent fire. In both instances, the frequency of these fires has changed dramatically in the past two decades, leading to dramatically negative impacts on biodiversity, as well as significant risk to human health, safety and infrastructure.
Reflecting back to our earlier session on linear infrastructure expansion, one of the presenters showcased the close relationship between roads and wildfire in Chile, showing that 90% of fires occur within one kilometer of a road. We heard evidence that showcased that the world is on the precipice of tipping into a very vicious cycle in which climate change is not only driving massive changes in fire frequency, size and intensity, but it is also becoming a driver of climate change as a very significant emitter of CO2 and destroyer of carbon biomass reserves.
The local fire agency, Bomberos Voluntarios de Santiago de Cali, provided the firefighter perspective, highlighting how the forests surrounding Cali are burning, often times for the first time, highlighting the need for fire departments across Colombia and all of the LAC region to develop new operational capacity to prevent and fight these fires, often in the absence of scientific research that can guide their management activities. As we left this event, all panelists saw the value of cooperation between academia, fire management agencies, community leadership, policymakers and industry in developing and adopting science-based approaches to best build resiliency for both communities and nature.
On Monday, Oct. 28,
our planned wildfire workshop, “International Perspectives on Developing Community and Biodiversity Resilience to Wildfire under Global Change“, yielded a productive working session between CBI, Bomberos Voluntarios de Santiago de Cali, Dr. Stijn Hantson (Universidad del Rosario, Colombia) and Dr. Lluís Brotons (CREAF). We went beyond discussing the wildfire-related needs across the region and co-created a vision for a Latin American and Caribbean regional resource for wildland fire science, research, education and training.
We built out a high-level set of objectives, requirements and priorities and are now back in our respective homes, collaborating in developing a fully fleshed-out proposal and strategy for how to make this vision a reality.
We also captured some great video footage that will ultimately be used to promote this effort, thanks to the amazing team at Intercultural Productions. If you’d like to add your voice to this effort, please join us on our Wildfire Collective Discord group.
On Tuesday, October 29,
we ended our events in Cali with a highly informative panel discussion on “Protecting Biodiversity & Advancing Renewables Through Energy-Water-Food Synergies”, co-hosted by REN21 and Fundación Bariloche. The Former Secretaria Nacional de Energía de Panamá 2023-2024 kicked things off by providing detailed statistics on the projected minerals and water required to achieve global net zero 2050 targets through renewable energy infrastructure development. This starkly highlighted how regions with critical energy transition minerals (Africa, Asia-Pacific and Latin America and the Caribbean) will experience significant additional pressure on their biodiversity as a result of this transition. This illustrates just how important the implementation of multi-benefit infrastructure such as agrivoltaics, recycling of scarce minerals and most importantly, reduction of energy consumption will be in achieving these goals without dramatic impacts on global biodiversity.
Panelists discussed the importance of predictive models and aligned incentive programs in achieving carbon neutrality while also increasing the area of healthy habitat in support of biodiversity. We were reminded that while many parts of the world have much to benefit from shifting from fossil fuel to renewable energy generation, grassroots advocacy and education are critical to creating a groundswell of public pressure that pushes policy and investment in that direction.
The CBI team wrapped up COP16 feeling optimistic about the capacity of the attending organizations and parties to collaborate toward aligning and implementing innovative, large-scale, effective policies, incentives and programs to achieve meaningful progress toward the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework and Paris Agreement targets. We left with new relationships with partner organizations that complement CBI’s capabilities, and we look forward to showcasing future collaborative work that results from our collective investment of time and resources at COP16.