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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Environment
Patrick Greenfield

Politicians, not public, drive U-turns on green agenda, says UN biodiversity chief

A youngish south Asian man holds a green briefcase up to the camera
Rishi Sunak with a green version of the usually red budget box at the Cop26 climate change conference in Glasgow, when the prime minister was chancellor. Photograph: Phil Noble/Reuters

Government backtracking on environmental promises is being driven by politicians and vested interests, not the public, the acting UN biodiversity chief has said, as he called for greater support for those experiencing short-term costs from green policies.

David Cooper, acting executive secretary for the UN convention on biological diversity (CBD), told the Guardian he believed the public mood was not moving against greater environmental protections, and that vested interests opposed to action on the climate crisis and nature loss were trying to frustrate progress.

The comments come after a series of backtracks on climate commitments by the UK government and a political backlash against nature restoration policies in the EU from farming, forestry and fishing industries.

An anxious-looking older man is seen speaking from a conference dais
‘When the public are allowed to express their views, they come up with good decisions,’ says Cooper. Photograph: J Haber/UN Biodiversity

Less than a year after governments agreed this decade’s targets to halt the destruction of the natural world, Cooper said that while meeting some climate and biodiversity targets required short-term tradeoffs, they were vital for maintaining a habitable planet now and in the future.

“I don’t accept that the public mood as a whole is moving against the environment. The public as a whole, and particularly young people, see this as more and more important,” said Cooper.

“We see some backtracking in different parts of the world but a lot of this is political groups trying to find wedge issues to gain a marginal advantage in an upcoming election,” he said. “When the public are allowed to express their views, they come up with good decisions.”

He cited the recent citizens’ assembly on biodiversity in Ireland and the vote in Ecuador against continuing with oil and gas exploration in the Amazon rainforest as moments when the public had pushed for stronger environmental protections.

“People are actually ahead of the governments. We must not allow ourselves to be persuaded that there is a pushback by the public as a whole,” he said.

Cooper said he accepted there were sometimes costs in the short term to environmental policies, but said governments should work with communities who felt threatened to find a way forward.

“[The pushback] is partly led by politicians speaking to their base and … vested interests that will do what they can to deny some of the issues we’re facing in climate change, biodiversity loss and the like,” Cooper added.

“The goals and targets of these environmental agreements are ambitious. They’re not easy to achieve, and they’re not going to be achieved only by incremental action, even though that’s an important part of it,” he said.

“But it is very clear that it’s absolutely essential to meet them if we want a habitable planet, perhaps even for ourselves, but certainly for our children.”

  • This article was amended on 11 October 2023 to reflect that Cooper cited the citizens’ assembly on biodiversity loss in Ireland, not the UK-wide citizen’s assembly on nature. This was due to an editing error.

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