President Irfaan Ali joined over 100 world leaders in a sustainable land use pact at the United
Nations 26 th Conference of Parties on Climate Change (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland on
Tuesday.
“The COP26 World Leaders Summit ‘Action on Forests and Land Use’ event brought together
an unprecedented alliance of governments, companies, financial actors, and non-state leaders to
raise ambition on forests and land-use,” said the United Kingdom in an online policy paper. The
world leaders committed to working together to halt and reverse forest loss and land degradation
by 2030.
The full declaration is stated below:
We, the leaders of the countries…
Emphasise the critical and interdependent roles of forests of all types, biodiversity and
sustainable land use in enabling the world to meet its sustainable development goals; to help
achieve a balance between anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions and removal by sinks; to
adapt to climate change; and to maintain other ecosystem services.
Reaffirm our respective commitments, collective and individual, to the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change and the Paris Agreement, the Convention on Biological
Diversity, the UN Convention to Combat Desertification, the Sustainable Development Goals;
and other relevant initiatives.
Reaffirm our respective commitments to sustainable land use, and to the conservation,
protection, sustainable management and restoration of forests, and other terrestrial eco-systems.
Recognise that to meet our land use, climate, biodiversity and sustainable development goals,
both globally and nationally, will require transformative further action in the interconnected
areas of sustainable production and consumption; infrastructure development; trade; finance and
investment; and support for smallholders, Indigenous Peoples, and local communities, who
depend on forests for their livelihoods and have a key role in their stewardship.
Highlight the areas of strong progress in recent years and the opportunities before us to
accelerate action.
We therefore commit to working collectively to halt and reverse forest loss and land degradation
by 2030 while delivering sustainable development and promoting an inclusive rural
transformation.
We will strengthen our shared efforts to:
1. Conserve forests and other terrestrial ecosystems and accelerate their restoration;
2. Facilitate trade and development policies, internationally and domestically, that promote
sustainable development, and sustainable commodity production and consumption, that
work to countries’ mutual benefit, and that do not drive deforestation and land
degradation;
3. Reduce vulnerability, build resilience and enhance rural livelihoods, including through
empowering communities, the development of profitable, sustainable agriculture, and
recognition of the multiple values of forests, while recognising the rights of Indigenous
Peoples, as well as local communities, in accordance with relevant national legislation and
international instruments, as appropriate;
4. Implement and, if necessary, redesign agricultural policies and programmes to incentivise
sustainable agriculture, promote food security, and benefit the environment;
5. Reaffirm international financial commitments and significantly increase finance and
investment from a wide variety of public and private sources, while also improving its
effectiveness and accessibility, to enable sustainable agriculture, sustainable forest
management, forest conservation and restoration, and support for Indigenous Peoples and
local communities;
6. Facilitate the alignment of financial flows with international goals to reverse forest loss
and degradation, while ensuring robust policies and systems are in place to accelerate the
transition to an economy that is resilient and advances forest, sustainable land use,
biodiversity and climate goals.
We urge all leaders to join forces in a sustainable land use transition. This is essential to meeting
the Paris Agreement goals, including reducing vulnerability to the impacts of climate change and
holding the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2°C and pursuing efforts to
limit it to 1.5°C, noting that the science shows further acceleration of efforts is needed if we are
to collectively keep 1.5°C within reach. Together we can succeed in fighting climate change,
delivering resilient and inclusive growth, and halting and reversing forest loss and land
degradation.
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