Speech of Permanent Secretary of Ministry of Environment on the Celebration of the International Day for Biological Diversity 31/05/2021
I am delighted to welcome you to the celebration of the International Day for Biological Diversity. This Day is normally celebrated on 22nd May with the aim of raising understanding and awareness on biodiversity and its critical importance for human life and development.
We have decided to celebrate it today, in the week dedicated to Environment in our country, because we find the theme for the Biodiversity Day which is “We are Part of the Solution for Nature” in alignment with the World Environment Day’s theme: “Ecosystem Restoration” which indeed brings in focus on reshaping relationship with nature.
This year’s theme emphasizes last year slogan, “Our Solutions are in Nature”, this means we have to find the solutions to current nature degradation and biodiversity loss because the future for us and our descendants depends on nature and ecosystems goods and services they provide us.
Biodiversity, represented by all life forms on earth, being those that we can see with our eyes or those that we cannot see with naked eyes, plays a critical role in respective ecosystems. Living organisms are the bedrock from which well-functioning processes in nature, supply us with the oxygen, water, all kind of foods and medicines that are indispensable for our survival. Biodiversity contributes to clean our environment, to make our planet beautiful with wonderful landscapes. All this enhance our cultural, spiritual and social life.
Biodiversity is also important for the economy. It is estimated that the global ecosystem services provide yearly benefits of more than one hundred trillion US dollars.
Rwanda has enjoyed strong economic growth in the last two decades, and as in many developing countries, this growth relies on natural resource exploitation. Indeed environmental resources and systems are the basis for socio-economic prosperity and quality of life, they provide goods and services that are essential for food and energy production, industrial and manufacturing development, pollution and disease control and climate regulation to mention but a few.
However, traditional GDP growth doesn’t account for resource depletion and environmental degradation which, in long term, risk to decrease the potential for economic growth and development.
Contribution of environment to the economy at a glance:
Biodiversity is also critical for climate mitigation and climate resilience by storing carbon and reducing impacts of climate change. Adversely climate change can induce negative impacts on biodiversity and ecosystem services putting life at risk.
Despite all the benefits that we derive from biodiversity and ecosystem services, globally, the trend is that our activities have been consistently destroying or degrading the environment, resulting in huge biodiversity and ecosystem services loss. Triggered by various interests and policies, farmers, miners, foresters, businesses, fishers, institutions are exerting tremendous pressure on nature and biodiversity through overexploitation, pollution, mismanagement to mention but a few.
We are part of biodiversity and we are biting the hand that feeds us
Destroying the nature has a boomerang effect. Indeed we are impacted by the consequences of this destruction in different ways: food insecurity, water scarcity, climate related disasters inducing huge economic losses and new diseases like the COVID-19 that is devastating the humanity currently.
We are part of the solution
Let us be part of the solution otherwise we are paving the way to our own extinction. Individually and collectively, nationally and globally we can change the current pathways of destroying biodiversity and release the pressure.
Being part of the solution is by:
In our country, considerable progress has been made to curb biodiversity loss through developing policies and strategies geared to protect and conserve biodiversity, to reduce pressure on our forests, to restore degraded ecosystems. We are part of the global frameworks to conserve biodiversity, combat land degradation and impacts of climate change. We have committed to Bonn Challenge and Paris Agreement just to mention but a few.
However the work ahead to conserve nature is still huge. We need to establish strong collaboration mechanisms regionally and globally as ecosystems don’t know boundaries. We are happy to be with the European Union today and we are confident that this collaboration is going to be enhanced.
“Let us be the solution for Mother Nature by bringing transformative change in our everyday activity to conserve biodiversity and ecosystems. Saving the Nature is Saving our Life”. PS Karera Patrick
Thank you
Topics
More posts
Rwanda has from 14th to 16th February hosted a two-day workshop for negotiators of the High Ambition Coalition to End Plastic Pollution (HAC). The…
In a ground-breaking move towards sustainable living, the Rwanda Environment Management Authority (REMA) is making significant strides in the fight…
The beneficiaries of the Ecosystem/Landscape Approach to Climate Proof the Rural Settlement Programme of Rwanda, also known as LDCF3 Project, who…
The Government of Rwanda has welcomed the ground-breaking decision made at the 28th Conference of the Parties (COP28) to the United Nations Framework…
Rwanda has today launched its National Carbon Market Framework in a significant stride towards a greener and more sustainable future. The framework…
Kigali, 17 November, 2023- Kigali, REMA, in collaboration with the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Rwanda(AIMS_Rwanda), celebrated the…
The Rwanda Environment Management Authority distributes 5,000 improved cookstoves to beneficiaries of the Landscape Restoration Approach to Climate…
The Biodiversity Finance Initiative (BIOFIN)’s Technical Advisor on Environmental Finance for Africa, Mr. Bruno Mweemba recently visited Rwanda from…
Rwanda in September 2023 joined the rest of the world to mark the World Ozone Day with the theme “Montreal Protocol: Fixing the Ozone layer and…