XF-321G2TM-U Financial costs of meeting global biodiversity conservation targets: Current spending and unmet needs
Abstract
Costs of Conservation In 2010, world governments agreed to a strategic plan for biodiversity conservation, including 20 targets to be met by 2020, through the Convention on Biological Diversity. Discussions on financing the plan have still not been resolved, partly because there is little information on the likely costs of meeting the targets. McCarthy et al. (p. 946 , published online 11 October) estimate the financial costs for two of the targets relating to protected areas and preventing extinctions. Using data from birds, they develop models that can be extrapolated to the costs for biodiversity more broadly. Reducing extinction risk for all species is estimated to require in the region of U.S. $4 billion annually, while the projected costs of establishing and maintaining protected areas may be as much as U.S. $58 billion—although both sums are small, relative to the economic costs of ecosystem losses.
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American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) (2012). Financial costs of meeting global biodiversity conservation targets: Current spending and unmet needs. XFID: XF-321G2TM-U. Retrieved from https://xframework.id/XF321G2TMU
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