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    World Environment Day 5 June

    June 05, 2020

     

    World Environment Day 5 June

    Time for nature


    The foods we eat, the air we breathe, the water we drink and the climate that makes our planet habitable all come from nature. For instance, each year, marine plants produce more  than a half of our atmosphere's oxygen, and a mature tree cleans our air, absorbing 22 kilos of carbon dioxide, releasing oxygen in exchange. Despite all the benefits that our nature  give us, we still mistreat it.That is why we need to work on that. That is why we need this Observance.

    World Environment Day, hosted by Colombia this 2020, is the most renowned day for environmental action. Since 1974, it has been celebrated every year on 5 June: engaging  governments, businesses, celebrities and citizens to focus their efforts on a pressing environmental issue.

    This year, the theme is biodiversity – a concern that is both urgent and existential. Recent events, from bushfires in Brazil, the United States, and Australia to locust infestations  across East Africa – and now, a global disease pandemic – demonstrate the interdependence of humans and the webs of life, in which they exist.

    But, do we really know its importance? Maybe our biodiversity trivial will help. Biodiversity and its connection to humans
    Biodiversity is the foundation that supports all life on land and below water. It affects every aspect of human health, providing clean air and water, nutritious foods, scientific  understanding and medicine sources, natural disease resistance, and climate change mitigation. Changing, or removing one element of this web affects the entire life system and can  produce negative consequences.

    Human actions, including deforestation, encroachment on wildlife habitats, intensified agriculture, and acceleration of climate change, have pushed nature beyond its limit. It would  take 1.6 Earths to meet the demands that humans make of nature each year. If we continue on this path, biodiversity loss will have severe implications for humanity, including the  collapse of food and health systems.

    The emergence of COVID-19 has underscored the fact that, when we destroy biodiversity, we destroy the system that supports human life. Today, it is estimated that, globally,  about one billion cases of illness and millions of deaths occur every year from diseases caused by coronaviruses; and about 75 per cent of all emerging infectious diseases in  humans are zoonotic, meaning that they are transmitted to people by animals.

     Source- https://www.un.org/en/observances/environment-day

    Last modified on Thursday, 04 June 2020 21:14

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