UNDecade ActionPlan
UNDecade ActionPlan
UNDecade ActionPlan
UN DECADE ON
ECOSYSTEM
RESTORATION, 2021-
2030
Version April 2023
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FOREWORD
Ecosystems are the web of life on Earth. From a grain of soil to the entire planet, every interaction and
each living organism is indispensable to enable key ecosystem functions and processes that we all
depend on. As long as the world continues to lose forests, pollute rivers, drain peatlands and overfish
the oceans, we are continuing to jeopardize the priceless benefits that ecosystems provide. These
include clean air, water, food, raw materials, but also protection from global threats such as food
insecurity, water insecurity, climate change, and global pandemics.
With a growing world population and rising demand for resources, nature is under increasing
pressure. We are using the equivalent of 1.7 Earths to maintain our current lifestyle – with stark
inequalities between and within countries and regions. The people who are least responsible for
resource overexploitation are most often those who suffer the worst consequences. Humanity is
facing a triple planetary crisis – climate change, pollution, and biodiversity loss - an unprecedented
dilemma that brings unknown scenarios. Only by stepping forward together and uniting the strength
of the entire world will we be able to address this challenge.
Parts of the planet are flooding while other parts are in flames. We are experiencing record droughts,
famines and diseases, and millions of people displaced from their homes. This is a climate crisis
created by humans. To rein in a climate catastrophe and mass extinction, nature must be repaired.
Time is running out, but there is still so much we can do. We look to the future with determination,
enthusiasm, and resolve. Beyond the grim scale of current ecosystem degradation, there is an
inspiring truth: incredible progress is already being made to conserve and restore ecosystems on the
ground.
The UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration 2021-2030 represents a rallying call to action across the
world. It is a call to everyone: from regional, national to local governments; from Indigenous Peoples
and local communities – guardians of most of the world’s ecosystems – to private companies;
financial institutions, from elders to youth. Researchers, farmers, civil society, decision-makers,
women, and every single player is needed to preserve and revitalize life on Earth.
This Action Plan is the invitation for concrete action, to join forces, and take leadership to achieve the
objectives set by the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration up to 2030.
We already have the knowledge and tools we need to halt degradation and restore ecosystems.
Willingness is necessary, and long-term success will depend on our ability to catalyse a global
movement that outgrows and outlives the 10-year timeframe.
We, humanity, are called to heal nature's wounds and restore the balance of every ecosystem. Let's
take action now; the present and future generations depend on us.
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CONTENTS
ACTION PLAN FOR THE UN DECADE ON ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION, 2021-2030 ............................... 1
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ............................................................................................................................... 6
RESTORATION CHALLENGE LEADS............................................................................................................ 7
ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS ............................................................................................................. 9
INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................................... 10
PURPOSE AND STRUCTURE OF THE ACTION PLAN ............................................................................... 12
1. ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION AND THE UN DECADE ....................................................................... 13
1.1. Ecosystem restoration: What is it and why do we need it? ..................................................... 13
1.2. UN Decade goals and pathways to action................................................................................ 15
1.3. Ecosystem restoration at the centre of local and global environmental action .................... 16
1.4. Principles for ecosystem restoration........................................................................................ 18
2. THE UN DECADE FRAMEWORK FOR ACTION .................................................................................. 19
2.1. Restoration Challenges.............................................................................................................. 19
1. RESTORATION CHALLENGE – BIODIVERSITY ............................................................................. 22
1.1 Increase biodiversity in Brazil through large-scale restoration and building the world’s largest
biodiversity corridor ........................................................................................................................... 22
1.2 Shift the world’s largest agriculture and farmlands ecosystem to agro-biodiversity
conservation (PR China) .................................................................................................................... 24
1.3 Implement 100 certified restoration projects across the globe to increase biodiversity gains
............................................................................................................................................................. 25
2. RESTORATION CHALLENGE – BUSINESS & PHILANTHROPY.................................................... 30
2.1 Facilitating a minimum of 50 million US dollars of private and philanthropic donations to
World Restoration Flagships ............................................................................................................. 30
2.2 200 companies to invest USD 10 billion to conserve and restore trees ................................... 33
3. RESTORATION CHALLENGE - CITIES ........................................................................................... 35
3.1 By 2030, at least 20 cities have been nominated as World Restoration Flagships and 100
cities are championing urban restoration ......................................................................................... 35
3.2 Urban spaces restored in over 1000 cities by 2030 ................................................................... 38
4. RESTORATION CHALLENGE – CLIMATE ..................................................................................... 42
4.1 350 M ha under restoration by 2030 while directly supporting over 100 million people from
climate-vulnerable communities to adapt ........................................... Error! Bookmark not defined.
4.2 Help close the global adaptation finance gap and scale global adaptation efforts ................ 49
4.3 Animation of the carbon cycle through rewilding as Nature-based Climate Solution ............. 51
5. RESTORATION CHALLENGE - COMMUNITIES ............................................................................. 55
5.1 Restore and secure land and resource rights to Indigenous Peoples and local communities
and recognise them as stewards of ecosystem restoration ........................................................... 55
5.2 Engagement and activation of faith communities and faith-led restoration flagships ........... 59
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The following document is the result of a joint effort by the partner network of the UN Decade on
Ecosystem Restoration, coordinated by United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
Experts with different backgrounds are thanked for their valuable lead and contributions: authors,
members of the Advisory Board, Task Forces, and the Strategy Group of the UN Decade as well as
partner organisations.
Writing team
Lead authors: Jane Feeney, Jean-Philippe Salcedo, Laura Nery Silva, Natalia Alekseeva, Ann-Kathrin
Neureuther, Xiao Li, Lucia Gonzalez, Tim Christophersen, Greg Searle
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RESTORATION CHALLENGE
LEADS
BIODIVERSITY Trinational Atlantic Forest Pact (UN World Restoration Flagship) page 22
Peking University
Foodthink
FAO
1t.org page 32
Restor page 58
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HUMAN- United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) page 90
NATURE
RELATIONSHIP
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
Ramsar Convention
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ABBREVIATIONS AND
ACRONYMS
CBD Convention on Biological Diversity
UN United Nations
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INTRODUCTION
Today we are faced with a challenge that calls for a shift in our thinking, so that humanity stops
threatening its life-support system. We are called to assist the Earth to heal her wounds and in
the process heal our own.
― Wangari Maathai (2004 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate)
Ecosystems are the foundations of the planet – they sustain life on Earth. Protecting and
restoring the world’s ecosystems is critical to tackling biodiversity loss and climate change,
while supporting livelihoods and wellbeing.
Healthy ecosystems provide food and clean water, mitigate climate change, support the
pollination of crops and soil formation, and hold important recreational, cultural, and spiritual
values. Yet from farmlands to forests, from oceans to urban areas, ecosystems are being
degraded, driven by the unsustainable use and exploitation of nature. An estimated one
million species of plants and animals face extinction, many within decades (IPBES, 2019).
Forty per cent of the world’s population are already negatively impacted by ecosystem
degradation, the most vulnerable groups hardest hit. Every action that halts further damage
is essential, and the sooner the better. Restoration offers the tools to recreate a balanced
relationship with the ecosystems that sustain people and nature. It is also imperative for the
economy; every dollar invested in ecosystem restoration creates up to 30 dollars in
economic benefits.
To prevent, halt and reverse the degradation of ecosystems worldwide, the United Nations
General Assembly, through Resolution 73/284, proclaimed 2021–2030 the UN Decade on
Ecosystem Restoration (hereafter the “UN Decade”). Ecosystem restoration is vital to
achieve the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the post-2020 global biodiversity
framework. The Strategy for the UN Decade was developed throughout 2019 and 2020 in an
open and collaborative process, built from input from over 1,000 organisations, institutions,
governments, businesses and individuals. Since the UN Decade was publicly launched in
June 2021, over a hundred and fifty organisations have joined as official partners and
thousands of people are taking part in #GenerationRestoration – a science-based global
movement for people and nature.
Between now and 2030, actions taken to restore ecosystems on every continent and in every
ocean are critical to the mission of the UN Decade. It will only succeed if everyone plays a
part. Countries have already committed to restoring a total of at least 1 billion hectares of
degraded land by 2030. Protecting and restoring the earth’s ecosystems is a mammoth task,
with complex political, technical, and financial obstacles to overcome. But we are not
starting from zero.
Generations of knowledge from local and indigenous communities, combined with cutting-
edge science, can help chart a path toward a healthier, more symbiotic relationship with
nature. Across the world, thousands of restoration initiatives, big and small, are underway,
offering inspiration and best practices.
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1. ECOSYSTEM RESTORATION
AND THE UN DECADE
1.1. Ecosystem restoration: What is it
and why do we need it?
Ecosystems are places where plants, animals, and other organisms, in conjunction with the
landscape around them, come together to form the web of life. They exist at all scales, from
a grain of soil to the entire planet (UNEP, 2021a). The UN Decade focuses on restoration in
eight broad categories of ecosystems:
● farmlands
● forests
● freshwater
● grasslands, shrublands, and savannahs
● mountains
● oceans and coasts
● peatlands
● urban areas
In all countries of the world, ecosystems are being degraded, in many cases at an
accelerating rate, driving biodiversity loss and climate change. Currently, 75 per cent of the
terrestrial environment, 40 per cent of the marine environment, and 50 per cent of streams
show severe impacts of degradation (IPBES, 2019).
What drives ecosystem degradation? Ecosystems become degraded as a direct result of
human activity (e.g. changes in land and ocean use, resource extraction, pollution,
introduction of invasive alien species and emission of greenhouse gases) and natural events
(e.g. earthquakes and extreme weather events). Behind these are indirect drivers - economic,
demographic, technological, governance and cultural factors – that lead to ecosystem
degradation. (IPBES, 2018, 2019). For example, intensified farming techniques, human
migration, an unsustainable economic model, and an increasing disconnect between people
and nature, are all underlying and interconnected causes of degradation.
Ecosystem degradation, biodiversity loss and climate change are interconnected and must
be tackled together. To address this complex challenge requires a massive portfolio of
solutions, the collective action of diverse groups of people, and system-wide transformative
change. Ecosystem restoration represents one fundamental part of this mission, offering
promising opportunities to restore the health and resilience of ecosystems.
Ecosystem restoration refers to “the process of halting and reversing degradation, resulting
in improved ecosystem services, and recovered biodiversity” (UNEP, 2021b, p. 7). In the
context of the UN Decade, ecosystem restoration encompasses a wide continuum of
activities that contribute to protecting intact ecosystems and repairing degraded
ecosystems 1. Examples include assisting natural regeneration, enhancing organic carbon in
agricultural soils, increasing fish stocks in overfished zones, green infrastructure, or
1
‘Degraded ecosystems’ refers to terrestrial, freshwater and marine systems that have been converted or altered, including in
agricultural landscapes and urban environments. ‘Repair’ encompasses processes and biotic/abiotic components. (UNEP and
FAO, 2020)
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removing pressures so that nature can recover on its own, for example, by controlling
invasive species.
Restoring ecosystems, on the other hand, can improve access to clean water, enhance food
security, provide jobs, reduce carbon emissions and build more resilient ecosystems and
communities. Ecosystem restoration makes sound economic sense. More than half of the
world’s total GDP is dependent on nature (World Economic Forum, 2020) and every dollar
invested in restoration creates up to 30 dollars in economic benefits (Ding et al., 2017).
Restoring forests, peatlands and mangroves, along with other natural solutions, can
contribute to over one-third of the greenhouse gas mitigation needed by 2030 (Griscom et
al., 2017).
This means that efforts to protect and restore nature need to be designed in partnership
with local communities. They must take into account social, cultural and economic
dimensions such as power relations, inequalities, livelihood impacts and trade-offs. Central
to all activities of the UN Decade is the need to recognise the human rights of all people. The
efforts of the UN Decade will only be successful if indigenous peoples, local communities
and women and girls are at the centre; if local wisdom, human rights, and tenure rights are
respected and upheld. By learning from local experts, providing support and removing
barriers, a generation of restoration champions can play a central role in achieving the UN
Decade - from mountain to coastal communities, from city dwellers to rural farmers.
Women’s meaningful participation in the design and implementation of restoration projects
is essential for effective and equitable outcomes. This will involve overcoming barriers so
that women can lead restoration activities across grassroots, science and policy levels.
The rationale for taking action to protect and restore ecosystems is abundantly clear. The
next section explains the overarching vision and goals that will guide actions under the UN
Decade.
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Barriers to progress
The UN Decade will address six primary barriers to catalysing a global movement that
promotes and implements large-scale restoration. These barriers relate to public awareness,
political will, legislative and policy environments, technical capacity, finance, and scientific
research.
Barrier 1 - Public awareness: There is a great lack of awareness of the negative effects that
ecosystem degradation is having on the well-being and livelihoods of billions of people, the
financial costs of this degradation, and the profound societal benefits that would come from
major investments in ecosystem restoration.
Barrier 2 – Political will: Despite the economic benefits that restoration investments would
bring societies, decision-makers in public and private sector invest too little in long-term
ecosystem restoration initiatives compared with investments in other sectors like health
care, manufacturing, education, and defence.
Barrier 3 – Legislative and policy environments: There is a scarcity of legislation, policies,
regulations, tax incentives and subsidies that incentivise a shift in investments towards
large scale restoration and production systems, value chains and infrastructure that do not
degrade ecosystems.
Barrier 4 – Technical capacity: National governments, local governments, local NGOs and
private companies possess limited technical knowledge and capacity to design and
implement large-scale restoration initiatives.
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Barrier 5 – Finance: There is a lack of finance to invest in large scale restoration because of
the perceived and/or real risks involved in such investments.
Barrier 6 – Scientific Research: Limited investment in long-term research, including social
as well as natural sciences, that focuses on innovation to improve restoration protocols
through time, is a barrier to progress.
Aside from these six primary barriers, participants in the global movement will encounter a
range of barriers along the way, from local ecological, economic, and social factors within
specific landscapes to global geopolitical factors and economic forces.
To overcome these barriers and achieve its vision, the UN Decade will work through three
pathways:
Pathway I: Global movement
Through a peer-driven, participatory global movement, this pathway seeks to increase the
intent of societies worldwide to restore degraded landscapes on a large scale. It will do this
by raising awareness of the benefits of ecosystem restoration, showcasing the economic
returns, and spreading knowledge to shift behaviours to reduce ecosystem degradation.
Pathway II: Political will
By empowering leaders in the public and private sectors to champion restoration and
building on the momentum of the global movement, Pathway II focuses on fostering political
will for ecosystem restoration. UN Decade partners and the core team will engage with
government ministries and departments to mainstream restoration into national budgets,
development plans and climate change strategies and amend legislative, regulatory and
policy frameworks to halt fragmentation and degradation of ecosystems and catalyse large-
scale ecosystem restoration.
Pathway III: Technical capacity
Pathway III aims to generate the technical capacity that is needed to effectively restore
ecosystems at scale. It will do this by providing institutions and practitioners the best
available methods for designing, implementing, monitoring and sustaining ecosystem
restoration initiatives. The aim is to upscale ecosystem restoration globally by strengthening
the role of science, indigenous knowledge and traditional practices and applying best
technical knowledge and practice while building the capacity of a wide range of
stakeholders.
degraded land. There are synergies with other international initiatives, among them the
Global Mangrove Alliance and the Blue Carbon Initiative, which aim to conserve and restore
mangrove habitats and coastal and marine ecosystems, respectively.
Governments around the world have already committed to restoring a total of nearly 1 billion
hectares of degraded land by 2030 (Sewell, van der Esch and Löwenhardt, 2020). Ecosystem
restoration, complementing conservation, can make a significant contribution to all 17
Sustainable Development Goals, in particular life below water (SDG 14) and life on land (SDG
15), as well as ending poverty (SDG 1), hunger (SDG 2), good health and well-being (SDG 3)
and clean water and sanitation (SDG 6). The post-2020 global biodiversity framework aims
to halt the loss of biodiversity by 2030, and achieve recovery and restoration by 2050, with
key targets for restoration and conservation by 2030 (targets 2 and 3) 2.
At regional level, increasing restoration targets are emerging through legal frameworks and
voluntary initiatives. Examples include the Nature Restoration Law of the European Union,
Initiative 20x20 in Latin America and the Caribbean, the African Forest Landscape
Restoration Initiative, AFR100, and the Middle East Green Initiative. At national level, the UN
Decade aims to mainstream restoration into national budgets, development plans and
biodiversity and climate strategies. To ensure actions are translated to the local context,
action plans are being developed by regional offices such as Latin America and the
Caribbean.
There are opportunities for collaboration across the UN, linking with the UN Decade of
Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021–2030) and the UN Decade of Family
Farming (2019–2028), and the International Decade of Indigenous Languages (2022-2032).
Restoration is complementary to, not a replacement for, conservation and climate action
Ecosystem restoration is not a substitute for conservation, but they go hand in hand.
Conservation is vital to prevent further degradation and biodiversity loss, while restoration
can help recover endangered species and enhance ecosystem services. Close to half of the
Earth’s land has been identified as needing immediate conservation and restoration
attention (Allan et al., 2021). Restoration gains will be most effective when combined with
the conservation of remaining natural ecosystems (Strassburg et al., 2020) and it is often
more cost-effective to conserve intact ecosystems rather than restore degraded ones
(OECD, 2019). As such, the UN Decade has a dual focus on protecting as well as restoring
ecosystems, so that shared goals and trade-offs are identified, and priorities are decided on
jointly between conservation and restoration policy makers and practitioners. Likewise, while
ecosystem restoration can contribute to climate mitigation, much more is needed to achieve
net zero targets. Restoration can only be successful, in the long term, in the context of a
wider socio-economic transition towards a nature-positive economy, by decarbonising
economic activity and redesigning systems to put wellbeing at the centre (FAO et al., 2021,
OECD, 2022).
2
The wording of the targets is yet to be agreed. The draft framework includes “Target 2. Ensure that at least 20 per cent of
degraded freshwater, marine and terrestrial ecosystems are under restoration, ensuring connectivity among them and focusing
on priority ecosystems.” and “Target 3. Ensure that at least 30 per cent globally of land areas and of sea areas, especially
areas of particular importance for biodiversity and its contributions to people, are conserved through effectively and equitably
managed, ecologically representative and well-connected systems of protected areas and other effective area-based
conservation measures, and integrated into the wider landscapes and seascapes.” (CBD, 2021)
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Source: FAO, IUCN CEM & SER. 2021. Principles for ecosystem restoration to guide the United Nations
Decade 2021–2030. Rome, FAO.
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contributions and make use of the existing UN Decade architecture, e.g. Task Forces. The
co-leading agencies of the UN Decade, UNEP and FAO, invited UN Decade partners to submit
their expression of interest to lead or co-lead one (or more) challenge(s) in 2022. Because
ecosystem degradation affects all countries and sectors of society in different ways,
restoring the web of life can only be achieved through wide collaboration across disciplines,
economic sectors, societal groups and geographical borders. These include national
governments, cities and local authorities, research and education institutions, the private
sector, donors and financial institutions, NGOs and CSOs, individuals, and communities
which are called upon to join, contribute, and take action in support. Everyone reading this
action plan is invited to consider how you can (or already do) contribute to these restoration
priorities. Gather your colleagues, friends and associates to build connections and tackle
these challenges together!
The Restoration Challenges have been developed through consultations in 2021 and 2022
with the UN Decade partner network. In response to evolving priorities, feedback and
experiences, the challenges may evolve and will be reviewed at key milestones throughout
the decade (see 3.9 ). Ecosystem restoration can be more than these focus areas and if
restoration work goes beyond these initially proposed twelve challenges, then even better.
Each proposed twelve restoration challenges is presented on the following pages,
accompanied by a list of sample actions directed at key stakeholder groups. These are
indicative rather than prescriptive actions, which will be expanded and elaborated on by
challenge teams. All restoration actions should follow the Principles of Ecosystem
Restoration and be embedded within the three pathways of the Decade (building a global
movement, generating political will and building technical capacity). Each of the challenges
will be featured in global campaigns as part of #GenerationRestoration throughout the
decade and are considered for the Secretary-General’s report on the UN Decade at the 81st
session of the UN General Assembly. Challenge teams are encouraged to find synergies
across thematic areas on a joint mission to restore Earth and humanity’s relationship with
nature.
(Co) Leading a Challenge
The Action has currently 29 individual challenges across the twelve thematic areas. Different
partners and stakeholders have expressed their interest in taking the lead of a specific
challenges. Every (co) lead organisation will be responsible for its own challenge, and
proposed activities. They are not expected to take coordination role beyond their individual
challenge within the thematic area.
Restoration Challenges
1. Restoration Challenge - Biodiversity
2. Restoration Challenge - Business & Philanthropy
3. Restoration Challenge - Cities
4. Restoration Challenge - Climate
5. Restoration Challenge - Communities
6. Restoration Challenge - Education
7. Restoration Challenge - Finance
8. Restoration Challenge - Food
9. Restoration Challenge - Human-Nature Relationship
10. Restoration Challenge - Marine & Freshwater
11. Restoration Challenge - Land
12. Restoration Challenge - Youth
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Vision: a world where – for the health and well-being of all life on Earth and that of future
generations – the relationship between humans and nature has been restored, where the area of
healthy ecosystems is increasing and where ecosystem loss, fragmentation and degradation has
been ended.
PATHWAY 1: PATHWAY 2: PATHWAY 3:
GLOBAL MOVEMENT POLITICAL WILL TECHNICAL CAPACITY
Outcome 1: Outcome 2: Outcome 3:
A global movement is Increased capacity and Strengthened capacity of
established that catalyses capability in private, public individuals and
ecosystem restoration initiatives, sector and civil society for organizations across
political will, exchange of policy reform to support and sectors and scales to
knowledge and cross sectoral provide incentives for effectively plan, implement,
collaboration for ecosystem ecosystem restoration, to monitor and sustain large-
restoration. catalyse investments and to scale ecosystem restoration
access resources, resulting in initiatives.
effective restoration actions on Results are documented and
the ground and implementation shared, through monitoring
within Flagship programmes. and reporting of biophysical
and socio-economic
elements of sustainable
ecosystem restoration and
influencing activities for
ecosystem restoration.
1. Biodiversity
2. Business & Philanthropy
3. Cities
4. Climate
5. Communities
6. Education
7. Finance
8. Food
9. Human-Nature Relationship
10. Marine & Freshwater
11. Land
12. Youth
UN Decade Partner network (Lead agencies, Collaborating Agencies, Global Partners, Supporting
Partners, Actors, Funding partners)
Stakeholders
Table visualising the connection between vision, pathways, challenges and calls to action
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1. RESTORATION CHALLENGE –
BIODIVERSITY
The Restoration Challenge for Biodiversity focuses on restoring ecosystems to prevent 60
per cent of expected species extinctions, contributing to halting the biodiversity crisis by
2030. Around one million plant and animal species are threatened with extinction (IPBES,
2019). Ecosystem restoration has the potential to prevent 60 per cent of these extinctions by
restoring 15 per cent of converted lands in priority areas (Strassburg et al., 2020). The
Biodiversity challenge aims to inspire a range of interventions to restore biodiversity,
including converting degraded ecosystems, enhancing connectivity and restoring or
conserving ecosystem processes through two national pilot challenges in Brazil and the
People’s Republic of China and implementing training and capacity building for restoration
projects.
Brazil is at the top among the world’s 17 megadiverse countries, and it contains two
biodiversity hotspots (the Atlantic Forest and the Brazillian Savannah), six terrestrial biomes
and three large marine ecosystems. At least 103,870 animal species and 43,020 plant
species are currently known, comprising 70% of the world’s catalogued animal and plant
species. It is estimated that Brazil hosts between 15-20% of the world’s biological diversity,
with the greatest number of endemic species on a global scale. Ecosystem restoration
efforts can not only contribute to mitigating climate change at a local and global scale,
improve local communities livelihood but is needed for biodiversity in Brazil.
Deforestation has been one of the main threats, leading to fragmentation and biodiversity
loss. To revert this scenario, this Challenge aims to promote ecosystem restoration in the
main three biomes in Brazil, the Atlantic Forest, the Amazon Forest, and the Brazilian
Savanna, contributing to enhancing biodiversity and ecosystem services.
The Challenge will be led by national and local UN Decade partners based in Brazil with the
support from global partners.
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KPIs:
Timeline:
2021-2025: Identification and training of actors in the restoration chain and sensibilization of
rural property.
2017-2020: Pilot project on three rural properties, with two nurseries producing 40.000
seedlings a year and planting 100.000 trees on 70 hectares.
Contacts:
1.2 Shift the world’s largest agriculture and farmlands ecosystem to agro-
biodiversity conservation (PR China)
For preventing, halting, and reversing the degradation of ecosystems worldwide, more
efforts need to be devoted to the agriculture ecosystem. Agriculture is responsible for 80%
of land conversion and the single largest driver of biodiversity loss worldwide. This is also
the case in China which ranks first in worldwide farm outputs and employs over 300 million
people. But farmlands are facing significant threats in China. Rapid land-use change and
heavy use of pesticides and fertilisers threaten agro-ecosystem functions and services,
putting both biodiversity and food safety at risk. Wildlife poaching and retaliatory killings
also occur frequently in farmlands.
This challenge builds a multi-stakeholder coordination mechanism for science, practice, and
policy on sustainable agricultural production and agro-biodiversity conservation in China. It
involves community actors, farmers, NGOs, academic researchers, policymakers, media, and
the public, improves knowledge-sharing and expertise exchange, and enhances
communication and understanding. Based on the mechanism, this challenges promotes
cross-discipline dialogues, refines and extends critical knowledge, identifies and fills
research gaps, and improves policies with partners. The long-term target is to mainstream
the awareness and practice of agro-biodiversity conservation in the world’s largest
agriculture and farmlands ecosystems.
The challenge will be led by the Shan Shui Conservation Center in partnership with Peking
University, Foodthink, and others.
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KPIs:
Timeline:
2023
● Pre-establish the coordination mechanism and identify problems and key points by
baseline review and discussions, as well as to present a detailed plan of this
restoration challenge of the UN Decade
● Comprehensive overview conducted both at the science and policy level on
challenges and status of biodiversity-friendly ecological agriculture and farmlands
ecosystem in China, and at the practice level on the ground.
● Development of an advisory guideline and a case study of biodiversity-friendly
ecological agriculture. The advisory guideline and a case study will guide practice
and raise awareness. To reach better consensus and balance among different
perspectives, the guideline will be highly compatible, based on knowledge from in
and out of China, as well as understanding and feedback from related stakeholders
including community actors, farmers, NGOs, academic researchers and government.
● Establish the multi-stakeholder coordination mechanism, provide a dialogue platform
and release one multi-stakeholder declaration. This will include webinars/seminars
or workshops with stakeholders, investigation of cases and gaps in biodiversity-
friendly agricultural practices, a multi-stakeholder declaration on biodiversity-friendly
ecological agriculture and farmland ecosystem, and collaboration with media.
Contacts:
1.3 Implement 100 certified restoration projects across the globe to increase
biodiversity gains
The aim of this challenge is to increase biodiversity gains from restoration initiatives
through training and capacity building for the implementation of standards-based ecological
restoration as a core component of the UN Decade.
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The Challenge will be led by Society for Ecological Restoration (SER) in partnership with
WWF.
KPIs:
● 10 Training and capacity building
● 100 local actors as “trainers”
● 100 standards-based ecological restoration projects implemented
Timeline:
2023: Finalize operational plans, partners, and fundraising
● Finalize Guiding Committee
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● Conduct project monitoring, consistent with the ISF, and adaptive management with
emphasis on biodiversity and local community benefits
● Certify project plans, implementation, and monitoring
● Conduct overall program assessment and share results widely
● Secure funding partners/supplemental project funding
● Initiate next 20 projects
● Determine future of program
Contacts:
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Similarly, State of Finance Nature report estimates that only approximately USD 133
billion/year currently flows into Nature-based solutions (NBS) with the vast majority from
public funds (86%) while private finance contributes only to 14%. While not all ecosystem
restoration activities are captured by climate finance or NbS financing flows, the figures
show that finance flowing to the sector remains insufficient (Coello and Frey, 2023).
The magnitude of needed investments often overburdens the allocation of national budgets
dedicated to advance environmental objectives, which is why the mobilization of capital
from different levels and types of actors (private, philanthropic, civil society organizations)
will be essential to make progress towards achieving the restoration goals, and on a wider
scope the Sustainable Development Goals (Coello and Frey, 2023).
The restoration of ecosystems is a systemic, cost-efficient and multifunctional NbS that can
make a significant contribution to addressing the climate and biodiversity crisis (Pörtner et
al., 2021; Turney et al., 2020). For example, restoration of only 15% of the converted land
areas could avoid 60% of the expected species extinctions when careful land use planning is
conducted and further degradation is prevented (Strassburg et al. 2020). In the two most
important global agreements on climate (UNFCCC) and biodiversity (CBD), NbS, including
restoration measures, are gradually being taken into account. The UN Decade on Ecosystem
Restoration (2021-2030) is an opportunity for policymakers to anchor restoration as an NbS
more firmly in the conventions and demonstrate the potential synergies.
The overall aim of the Business and Philanthropy Challenges is to help direct investments
from the private sector as well as from philanthropy and wealthy individuals into ecosystem
restoration initiatives which help close the financial gaps and tackle climate change and
biodiversity loss as well as create livelihoods.
World Restoration Flagships of the UN Decade are the first, best, or most promising
examples of large-scale and long-term ecosystem restoration in any country or region,
embodying the 10 Restoration Principles of the UN Decade. They enable the UN Decade to
make ecosystem restoration tangible for a broad audience and inspire a global movement to
scale up efforts to ‘prevent, halt and reverse the degradation of ecosystems worldwide’ and
raise awareness of the importance of successful ecosystem restoration.
A World Restoration Flagship represents an important, inspiring restoration area, and has
wider learning and restoration potential and scalability for which the UN Decade already
facilitates coordination, learning, scaling, and brings more attention to the area and the
obstacles it faces; it is strategic and innovative in nature and has the potential for triggering
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Through a first successful call for nominations in 2022, the UN Decade on Ecosystem
Restoration received 76 government-endorsed nominations. Following scientific selection
criteria, the UN Decade’s Task Forces on Science and Best Practices shortlisted 23 as “high
technical quality” leading to the First 10 World Restoration Flagships being announced at
CBD COP15 in December 2022. The responses received following the first call have
demonstrated that it was a resounding success and future call will be launched according to
available resources.
A Multi-Partner Trust Fund (MPTF) has been set-up as financial engine behind the UN
Decade for the implementation of the strategy of the UN Decade. The primary aims of the
Fund are to provide catalytic funding to support these World Restoration Flagships to
combat declining biodiversity, support livelihoods and green jobs, enhance natural resource
bases, and help societies adapt to and mitigate climate change through restoration of
terrestrial, freshwater and marine ecosystems globally. The MPTF’s Executive Board is
responsible for the overall strategic guidance on the Fund and decides on fund allocations.
Interested donors are invited to join the MPTF. Donors above USD 10 Million are invited to
become a permanent Executive Board member and take funding decisions. See here for
more information on the MPTF. The Multi-Partner Trust Fund provides numerous benefits to
development partners including robust needs analyses ensuring effective prioritisation of
activities and strategic allocation of funds, coordination and harmonisation of funding with
other global funds including greater probability for effective use of funds and an increased
probability of impact, and full transparency, using a public on-line platform Gateway which
contains real-time financial information, and results-based reporting.
The estimated total of USD 133 billion currently flowing into nature-based solutions annually,
with public funds representing 86% and private finance only 14%, will need to at least triple in
real terms by 2030 if the world is to meet its climate change, biodiversity and land
degradation targets. Restoration of ecosystems is the key investment opportunity within
nature-based solutions. And now is the time for collective action as science tells us.
The World Restoration Flagships under the UN Decade provide a key opportunity beyond the
MPTF also for private sector entities, philanthropic, and wealthy individuals to invest and
contribute to closing this gap in Nature-based solutions investments which by 2050, the total
investment needs of nature will amount to USD 8.1 trillion, and will be over USD 536 billion
annually. This projected total is almost four times the amount invested today.
World Restoration Flagships as well as other nominations receiving high scores in the
assessment processes represent a unique pool and pipeline restoration projects of
significant scale and scientifically pre-assessed for quick investments. Therefore, the aim of
this challenge is to create a mechanism to facilitate at least 50 million US dollars of direct
financial support by private sector entities, philanthropic and wealthy individuals to the
World Restoration Flagships by 2030.
This investment facilitation will be characterized by direct facilitation between donors and
recipients, with minimal transaction costs. Partners with expertise and credibility are being
sought to establish a ‘light’ investment facilitation mechanism.
The investment facilitation will start when an investor shows interest. The mechanism will
then handle the inquiry, present investment opportunities, and facilitate exchanges. World
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Donors will further be invited to sign up to be part of the UN Decade Partnership Network
and benefit from the network opportunities, if desired, as well as benefit from clear visibility
at global and regional level as part of the UN Decade’s communication and advocacy work
through direct affiliation to World Restoration Flagships and their impact assessments. The
mechanism will further include conferences and networking events as well as public event
participation opportunities.
While tracking capital flows to nature has proven very challenging and a need for a
comprehensive system and framework for labelling, tracking, reporting and verifying the
state of finance for nature has been identified, this mechanism will track finance
investments in a very ‘light’ way, remaining geared towards providing facilitating and pre-
establishment services.
KPIs:
● 50 million dollars raised by 2030
● 15 private sector entities as part of the UN Decade Partnership framework financially
supporting the World Restoration Flagships by 2030
● 30 web stories/articles and 5 presentations at key events showcasing and honouring
the supporters and Flagships
Timeline:
2023:
● Identifying co-leading entities and creation of (one) coordinator position with the
Challenge (co-)leading partner
2024:
● First call for private entities to join the Challenge and support the Flagships
2025:
● Annual report on Flagship and finance achievements
Contacts:
2.2 200 companies to invest USD 10 billion to conserve and restore trees
Considering the key role played by private sector in ecosystem restoration, this challenge
aims to mobilise 200 companies to make credible and accountable commitments to
conserve and restore trees, with a combined investment of at least USD 10 billion for
#GenerationRestoration.
The challenge is led by the 1t.org, which drives change by mobilising the private sector,
facilitating multi-stakeholder partnerships in key regions, and supporting innovation and
ecopreneurship on the ground for the UN Decade and the global #GenerationRestoration
movement. 1t.org enables Paris Agreement-aligned companies to pledge activities that aim
to conserve, restore, and grow trees and forest landscapes, and supports them in their
journey to improving the social and ecological quality and ambition of their commitments.
Through its global and regional engagements, 1t.org has already mobilised more than 60
companies who have pledged the equivalent of over 6 billion trees in over 60 countries as of
2022. By providing companies with tailored guidance and support to design, plan, implement
and monitor their activities, 1t.org accelerates impactful private sector investments that
deliver positive climate, nature, and social outcomes.
Activities include:
● Convene private sector actors on a monthly basis for peer-to-peer and expert
knowledge exchange on relevant topics such as responsible implementation, forest
carbon and monitoring.
● Convene multi stakeholder coalitions in 1t.org’s priority regions to address context-
specific opportunities and challenges for private sector engagement.
● Convene a community of restoration implementation organisations to develop
minimum criteria for effective private sector investments.
● Facilitate connections between private sector actors and relevant restoration
implementation organisations.
● Drive collective private sector action at scale by supporting the identification of
restoration investment opportunities in collaboration with restoration
implementation organisations.
● Leverage the World Economic Forum’s networks and events to raise awareness,
drive commitments and accelerate action on ecosystem restoration with business
and global leaders.
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KPIs:
● 575 companies with pledge by 2025
Timeline:
2023:
● World Economic Forum Annual Meeting: At least 75 companies with 1t.org pledges
2024:
● World Economic Forum Annual Meeting: At least 125 companies with 1t.org pledges
2025:
● World Economic Forum Annual Meeting: At least 175 companies with 1t.org pledges
● June 2025: At least 200 companies with 1t.org pledges
1t.org
Contacts:
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The Cities challenges outlined below invite innovative solutions to transform urban areas
and improve the wellbeing of urban residents by conserving existing natural habitats, re-
naturing degraded areas and greening infrastructure.
3.1 By 2030, at least 20 cities have been nominated as World Restoration Flagships
and 100 cities are championing urban restoration
This challenge aims to create a unifying platform and activity space for all the cities that are
contributing to the achievement of Restoration Challenge #4: Cities. The goal is to spread
knowledge, share tools, and build capacity on how to mainstream ecosystem restoration
activities and nature-based thinking into city management and planning practices, as well as
to increase advocacy around the return-on-investment in nature-based solutions and make
the business case for restoration.
As a quantitative target, the objective is to identify and involve at least 100 champion cities
through educational high-level module webinars and online city-to-city learning exchanges.
Furthermore, 20 cities from this cohort will be encouraged and given guidance on how to
apply to have their projects or urban area become World Restoration Flagships, thus
highlighting and raising the profile of urban restoration examples across the world.
The challenge leads will work with cities in their existing networks and initiatives 3 (engaging
in new ways) as well as recruit new cities. The aim is to scale-out engagement with cities to
shift the prioritisation of budgets towards an ecosystem-based approach. The qualitative
targets will include sharing feedback, stories, and lessons-learned from our 100 champion
cities (and a broader communications reach of 1000 cities) through the the CitiesWithNature
platform, and depending on available budget also the proposed global CoP on this platform.
3
Examples are: ICLEI’s INTERACT-Bio and Urban Natural Assets for Africa programme; FAO’s Green Cities Initiative and
Tree Cities of the World; UNEP’s UrbanShift.
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The challenge will be led by ICLEI - Local Governments for Sustainability, UN Environment
Programme (UNEP) and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO).
KPIs:
Timeline:
2023-2025:
● Milestone 1: High-level educational modules
● Milestone 2: City-to-City Learning Exchanges
● Milestone 3: Launch and cultivation of CoP with CitiesWithNature (pending
availability of resources)
2023-2030:
● Milestone 4: Ongoing engagement with and recruitment of cities through the CoP on
the CitiesWithNature platform (pending availability of resources)
It is proposed to carry out the challenge from 2023 to 2030. The bulk of the educational
high-level module webinars and online city-to-city learning exchanges will be held from 2023-
2025. Work with the CoP and encouragement of action commitments for restoration from
cities through the CitiesWithNature platform will be conducted for the full duration of the
decade, 2023-2030.
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Contacts:
The overarching goal of this challenge is to restore urban spaces, such as industrial and
institutional campuses, community gardens, urban food forests, wetlands, streams, beaches
by building ecosystem restoration plots on or near campus grounds; in a minimum of 1000
cities across the globe.
The challenge will incentivize the power of students and volunteers to come together and
collaborate to build ecosystem restoration plots in or near the campus grounds and start
sustainable and climate change adaptation activities to restore urban spaces in
collaboration with the UN Decade’s University Alliance and APSCC’s International Climate
Change Adaptation & Resilience Program (ICCARP) with six Nature-Positive thematic
programs;
Given the nature of environmental crisis and diverse risk factors for cities, the scope of this
challenge will be achieved through the following pathways by holding on to the
Precautionary Principal 15 of the Rio Declaration ‘Where there are threats of serious or
irreversible damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall not be used as a reason for
postponing cost-effective measures to prevent environmental degradation’.
● The mentioned programs will have tailor-made approaches, alliances, and networks
to accommodate diverse actors across the globe and collaborating municipalities;
● To start with, multidisciplinary case studies, gap analysis, and institution-building on
pollution-preventing pathways for a desirable future will be carried out in the
organized sectors starting from educational institutions, industries, etc.;
● Create a scalable gamified capacity building and green skill development that can be
delivered both online and offline to enable and empower with the tools and
techniques to lead and implement this program;
● Effective outreach will be catalyzed through the Central/ National Ministries and
Nodal Departments;
● Team up with Universities, higher education institutions, and schools in urban areas
and deliver the program and sign-up volunteers;
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The Challenge will be led by the Association for Promoting Sustainability in Campuses and
Communities (APSCC India).
This will be a continuing challenge starting in 2023 and scaling up until 2030, with an initial
focus on Asia & Pacific and then reach out to other parts of the globe. Half-yearly milestones
are being defined to monitor the progress on the number of institutions/ organizations
reached and ecosystems restored. Monitoring will be centralised with a dedicated portal for
this challenge.
KPls:
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Timeline:
2023:
● Develop programs to pick the low hanging fruit through small actions
● Sign up at least 50 institutions from urban/ suburban areas
● Sign up at least 500 volunteers
● Assist and work with volunteering teams to build 25 ecosystem restoration plots on
or near the campus grounds
● Assist and work with volunteering teams to restore at least 25 urban spaces, such as
community gardens, urban food forests, wetlands & other water bodies
2024-2030:
● Scale up the numbers by at least 50% year-on-year growth through 2030 target
covering more than 1000 cities
● Fundraise through donations, and establish partnerships with Regional/National
Government, and the corporate sector for CSR support.
● Delivering the program in-person or online
● Enabling and empowering the identified volunteers
● Assess the progress and evaluate the restored site through qualitative and
quantifiable measures
● Help with reporting and monitoring for post-restoration activities.
● Maintain a catalogue of ongoing and completed projects online and make use of
social media for outreach.
Contacts:
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● Individuals and
communities
● Research
Data storage and dissemination institutions/
organizations,
● Government
Departments
● IT sector
● International
Hosting International Conferences, Symposiums, Summits, Government and
Seminars, etc. Bodies
● National
Celebrating International Days of Importance governments
● Cities and local
Complement G20 Initiatives
authorities
● Research
institutions/
organizations
● Individuals and
communities
● Youth
Entrepreneurship/ Green Skill Development
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4.1 350 M ha under restoration by 2030 while directly supporting over 100 million
people from climate-vulnerable communities to adapt
This challenge aims at placing 350 M ha under restoration by 2030 while directly supporting
at least 100 million people from climate-vulnerable communities to adapt to the impacts of
climate change by 2030 through nature-based solutions that improve land management and
restore ecosystems. It will kickstart through a series of conversations among co-leading
entities and other challenge-interested organizations to refine the goal to have numerical
targets in line with the latest climate science, of an ambition that is appropriate to meet the
climate crisis, and that addresses both mitigation and adaptation needs. Indicators include
the extent of area under restoration (Ha), the climate mitigation impact measured in Gt CO2e
(ie, the estimated change in sequestered aboveground & belowground carbon, soil organic
carbon, and blue carbon equivalents from pre-project baseline , accounting for additionality
and leakage), and people from climate-vulnerable communities supported through
adaptation and restoration activities.
Bronson Griscom's “Natural Climate Solutions” paper transformed the global conversation
on nature's role in mitigating the climate crisis.3 Conservation International’s Exponential
Roadmap for Natural Climate Solutions 4 and network of country offices enable challenge
leads to have a scientific frame through which to mount a fast, effective, and large-scale
effort to demonstrate the benefits of underutilized restoration strategies worldwide to
combat climate change In order to reach the scale needed to address this challenge, lead
organizations will integrate the multiple perspectives needed for success and engage other
UN Decade partners, international and regional networks.
For both mitigation and adaptation, key activities include stocktaking, understanding the
current and projected activities of partners that can contribute to the goals to 2030, and
aligning monitoring and best practices for permanence and sustained contributions of
restoration activities to solving the climate crisis.
The proposed resulting challenge refinement would be a collective goal, with common
reporting and projected contributions to the goal from different UN Decade organizations
according to their self-defined capacities and interest. Other organizations can contribute
and align to these efforts at any time. Reaching the immense scale and ambition of this
challenge will be contingent on accelerating restoration finance towards this challenge and
depend heavily on the capacities and support given to UN Decade partners engaged in
3
Griscom B.W., etal., 2017. Natural climate solutions. PNAS 114 (44) 11645-11650
4
Exponential Roadmap for Natural Climate Solutions.
https://www.conservation.org/priorities/exponential-roadmap-natural-climate-solutions
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scaling restoration for climate mitigation and adaptation. It has many connections with
other UN Decade Challenges and their goals.
Mitigation:
2. 5+ year monitoring to ensure the establishment and basic reporting of restored areas
(Example: CI-WRI Tree Restoration Monitoring Framework) 5;
Adaptation:
1. Sharing information on best practices for integrating climate risk into project design
(safeguards), determining vulnerable communities/people to establish baselines and
monitoring (Example: Conservation International’s climate risk safeguards tool and
NbS adaptation outcome methodologies).
2. Facilitate prioritization, co-design, inclusion and support for restoration for climate-
vulnerable communities, including IPLCs, where people are most dependent on
degraded nature (Example: Nature Dependent People research, Fedele et al. 2021 6).
Adaptation/Mitigation integration:
5
Tree Restoration Monitoring Framework - Field Test Edition (conservation.org)
6
Nature-dependent people: Mapping human direct use of nature for basic needs across the tropics -
ScienceDirect
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the regions sharing of best practices over the years. The target areas will be informed by
strategic mapping of climate (mitigation and adaptation), community and biodiversity (CCB)
priorities in order to target limited resources to where they will have the most impact on the
climate crisis. Potential sources can include existent carbon, communities and biodiversity
(CCB) mapping by Conservation International for tree-based restoration (based on Cook
Patton et al. 2020, IUCN red list data and predicted ecosystem services from restoration
data layers), Fedele et al. 2021’s work on Nature-dependent people, and prioritization work
on mangrove restoration (new potential map forthcoming), rangelands restoration, or
equivalent for other ecosystems.
The Challenge will be led by Conservation International (CI), who will focus Challenge efforts
towards collaborating with the regional and thematic challenge co-leads and other UN
Decade partners towards the activities necessary to drive progress on the three core Climate
challenge indicators – hectares restored, GtCO2e sequestered, and climate-vulnerable
people supported.
CI’s Bronson Griscom's “Natural Climate Solutions” paper has transformed the global
conversation on the role of nature in mitigating the climate crisis.[1] CI leads on science-
driven restoration research and implementation through global thought leadership like our
recently published Exponential Roadmap for Natural Climate Solutions (conservation.org)[2].
CI’s network of 30 country offices enables the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration to
mount a fast, effective, and large-scale effort to demonstrate the benefits of underutilized
restoration strategies worldwide to address climate change issues. Because CI’s global
restoration, catalytic science and adaptation teams sit in its Natural Climate Solutions
Center, CI is well positioned to lead the Climate Challenge in a way that integrates the
multiple perspectives needed for success.
The alignment of the framing of the challenge goals in similar indicators (ha, CO2e, climate
vulnerable people) to existing efforts, will create synergies between the actions taken by
U.N. Decade partners and the numerous existing commitments in this space, reinforcing key
goals and operationalizing/accelerating action towards them, as opposed to creating
additional redundant commitments. In both the mitigation and adaptation space, it is widely
recognized that while there are numerous existing commitments, action towards achieving
them is too little, too slow and too late.
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KPIs:
● Ha under restoration
● Gt CO2e sequestered
● Adaptation: climate-vulnerable people supported
Timeline:
2023:
• Survey of UN Decade partners for interest in, capacity to participate and proposed
resourcing of the Climate Challenge
• Develop thinking on alignment of UN Decade Climate Challenge goal with targets in
major conventions (CBD [GBF, NBSAPs], UNCCD [LDNs], UNFCCC [NDCs]), Bonn
Challenge and other national and regional commitments
2025:
● 35 M ha; 1 Gt CO2e; and 30 million people from climate-vulnerable communities
supported (to be further revised in Q1-2 2023 with discussions with partners and
informed by projections from Exponential Roadmap for NCS on what will keep us on
track to 350 M by 2030)
2030:
● 350 M ha (aligns with Bonn Challenge goal, UN climate champions' 2030
breakthrough goal, in the Exponential Roadmap for NCS, ENACT partnership for NbS
with Egypt/Germany/IUCN that came out of COP27), 50 M ha of this goal comes
from 20x20 and 100 M ha of this goal comes from AFR100, such that this Challenge
is a way to include and build upon existing commitments, but reaching the 350 M ha
goal will depend on finding the resources to expand the ambitions of regional
initiatives even further in the areas most strategic for climate, community and
biodiversity.
● XGtCO2e (to be further revised in Q1-2 2023 with discussions with partners and
informed by projections from Exponential Roadmap for NCS on what will keep us on
track to 350 M by 2030)
● 100 million people from climate vulnerable communities supported
Conservation International
Co-Leads: AFR100, 20x20 Initiative, AFoCO, UNEP, FAO, Global Rewilding Alliance, Yale
School of the Environment (tbc). Potential discussions to be held with other partners such
as UNFCCC, GEF, IUCN, WRI, TNC, GRO.
Contacts:
between regional initiatives and the UN Decade Climate Challenge, and build on the
significant progress these regional initiatives have made in compiling commitments and
promoting restoration action. CI will work with regional co-leads to integrate these important
initiatives and their goals into the drive to scale needed for the UN Decade Climate
Challenge, and understanding how the UN Decade Climate Challenge can help potentiate the
scaling of existing regional and local initiatives.
Africa
AFR100
AFR100 (the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative) is a country-led effort to bring
100 million hectares of land in Africa into restoration by 2030. AFR100 contributes to the
Bonn Challenge, the African Resilient Landscapes Initiative (ARLI), the African Union Agenda
2063, the Sustainable Development Goals and other targets. Follow #AFR1OO
For the Africa region, the AFR100 co—lead will build on its restoration expertise, networks,
and existing projects in member countries such as Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon,
Central African Republic, Chad, Cote D’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eswatini,
Ethiopia, Federal Republic of Somalia, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi,
Mali, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Republic of Congo, Republic of Sudan, Rwanda,
Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe, as well
as many technical and financial partners (TFPs), aiming at:
∉ Scaling up climate mitigation and adaptation efforts through ecosystem restoration
∉ Capacity-building to disseminate knowledge. Operation of regional workshops,
trainings and accelerators. Contribute to the development of joint publications
∉ Development of multi-country proposals
KPIs:
● Ha under restoration
● Gt CO2e sequestered
● Adaptation: climate-vulnerable people supported
Contacts:
Americas
Initiative 20x20 is a regional partnership to bring more than 50 million hectares of degraded
land into the process of conservation and restoration by 2030. Restoration and conservation
could deliver 60% of emissions reductions needed by 2050 in Latin America and the
Caribbean. Initiative 20x20 combines expertise, intent, and capital in Latin America and the
Caribbean to transform the dynamics of land degradation and advance restoration across
the region.
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For the Americas region, the 20x20 co—lead will contribute its existing restoration expertise,
networks, and existing projects in member countries such as Argentina, Belize, Bolivia
(Santa Cruz province), Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay,
as well as many technical partners, aiming at:
∉ Scaling up climate mitigation and adaptation efforts through ecosystem restoration
∉ Through the 20x20 task forces, contribute to capacity-building and knowledge
dissemination of best practices. Operation of regional workshops, trainings and
accelerators. Contribution to the development of joint publications
∉ Encouraging 20x20 partners to develop multi-country proposals to support regional
goals and priorities
KPIs:
• Ha under restoration
• Ha under new conservation areas
• Adaptation: climate-vulnerable people supported
Contacts:
Asia-Pacific
For the Asia-Pacific region, the Asian Forest Cooperation Organization (AFoCO) co—lead will
build on its restoration expertise, networks, and existing projects in member countries such
as Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand, Timor-Leste, and Viet
Nam aiming at:
These activities will include parameters that will allow to measure contributions to and
across many challenges, i.e. Forest areas restored and rehabilitated as a proportion of total
land area (ha), GtCO2e sequestered, above and below ground biomass stock in forests,
existence of national or sub-national policies/strategies/legislations/regulations/institutions
explicitly encouraging SFM, employment related to the forest sector, persons trained
through capacity building,climate-vulnerable people supported through restoration, etc.
KPIs:
• Ha under restoration
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• Gt CO2e sequestered
• Adaptation: climate-vulnerable people supported
• Implementation of national/subnational policies encouraging SFM
• Capacity building
• Green jobs created
Timeline:
2023:
● Restoration-based webinar series preparation: AFoCO hosts a UN Decade Climate
Action Webinar Series together with other interested co-leads, targeting 1 webinar
per quarter. It is proposed that 2 webinars be held in the first half of 2023, while
planning for a face-to-face 3-day workshop at the Gangwon Forestry Exhibition in
September 2023.
The webinar topics will be planned through consultations with other interested co-
leads and the Capacity Development Division of AFoCO but could include sub-topics
of Nature-based Solutions, biodiversity, and urban forestry.
● Stocktaking preparation: Learning sessions with other interested challenge leads will
be conducted on a regular basis to develop a template for the stocktaking exercise
so as to ensure reporting consistency.
● Planning for a private sector tree-planting programme:
AFoCO will aim to initiate conversations with private sector initiatives to explore the
possibility of implementing a large-scale restoration programme.
● Roadmap planning: If necessary/feasible, a face-to-face roadmap planning session
can also take place at the Gangwon Forestry Exhibition in September 2023 alongside
the workshop.
● Identification of local community champions in the restoration of different forest
types (e.g. successful cases of communities managing to achieve both
environmental and livelihood benefits in mangroves, peatlands, drylands
ecosystems, etc.)
2024:
● Webinar series kickoff/launch:
Based on the outcomes of the 2023 webinar series, the planning and implementation
of the 2024 webinar series will proceed in consultations with the UN Decade team
and other challenge leads.
● Stocktaking preparation/implementation:
Once developed, the pilot testing of the stocktaking template will be done (and tried
in one AFoCO project) before the template is disseminated to other members of the
UN Decade.
● Engagement platform development
Development of the matching-making platform to link restoration funders and
implementers on the Digital Hub and fundraising campaign targeted at private
entities, to support their tree-planting CSR campaigns.
Contacts:
4.2 Help close the global adaptation finance gap and scale global adaptation efforts
It will create a roadmap for the private sector to increase the private financing support
available, produce missing knowledge products, and influence key climate processes, such
as the Global Adaptation Goal (GAG). Key stakeholders include other UN agencies,
international and national NGOs, research and academic institutions, the private sector,
youth, non-traditional stakeholders and CSOs.
Goals include:
● Increasing the part of the global climate finance made available for adaptation (e.g.,
developing roadmaps or business plans for the private sector and governments to
fund adaptation-focused restoration projects, conducting studies, and developing
reports highlighting the cost-effectiveness of adaptation initiatives, particularly in
terms of co-benefits, including climate mitigation and restoration).
● Scaling up the financial support of both public and private entities towards
adaptation.
7
Adaptation Gap Report 2022 (UNEP)
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● Better informing and communicating on the many linkages between adaptation and
mitigation, and between restoration activities and adaptation initiatives, and
mitigation of trade-offs.
KPIs:
Timeline:
2023:
● Start the design and implementation of the challenge
2024:
● Update/revise the challenge based on the results from the GGA review/monitoring
process
2025:
● Provide a first official review/monitoring of the activities in 2025
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2026-2030:
● Readjusting the indicators and goals
Contacts:
A recent study (Schmitz, O.J. et al. 2023: Trophic rewilding can expand natural climate
solutions”, Nature Climate Change, accepted for publication) of how larger wild vertebrates
affect ecosystems shows that they are already playing a very significant climate role. Ten
documented case studies of marine fish, whales, sharks, gray wolf, wildebeest, sea otter,
muskox, African forest elephant and American bison demonstrate that by protecting or
restoring the populations they could together facilitate the capture of 6.41 GtCO2 annually.
This would contribute with more than 95% of what is needed every year - 6.5 GtCO2 - to meet
the global target of removing 500 GtCO2 from the atmosphere by 2100 and preventing
climate warming beyond 1.5oC.
The ACC concept requires abandoning a static understanding of conservation and nature-
based climate solutions, such as forest plantations, and replacing it with dynamic
landscapes and seascapes, which enable wild animal species to reach meaningful densities
through a conservation strategy - trophic rewilding - that aims to repair the food webs.
There is also a big advantage to focus on long-lived species like the studied wildlife group
with average longevity between 20 and 200 years. This will ensure very significant carbon
net contributions until the end of the century if the species are protected. If not, these
ecosystems could flip from being carbon sinks to sources.
It is also essential to look at ecosystems and species beyond forests, including marine ones.
The species studied are only the top of the ACC “iceberg”’, with many more candidate
species across the globe, such as African buffalo, white rhino, puma, dingo, Old- and New-
world primates, hornbills, fruit bats, harbour & grey seals, and logger head & green turtles.
Although the populations of many of these species have been heavily reduced through
human impact, we can expect many to bounce back rapidly with the right enabling
conditions.
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The ACC concept is not restricted to protected areas and the most intact parts of the world’s
natural areas. It also works considering human welfare, cultural heritage, ancestral
knowledge, and with the right tenure of land and sea in place. ACC through trophic rewilding
does not exclude economic opportunities. It allows and promotes an economy that is in line
with the needs for ecosystems to thrive, thereby securing the long-term availability of
ecosystem services communities depend on. Overexploitation of natural resources - as is
the norm now - erodes these services and makes it impossible for disadvantaged
communities to live on and off their land and sea.
An ecological climate model is currently under development at the Yale School of the
Environment financed through the Global Rewilding Alliance. It is intended as a practical tool
to ascertain the feasibility of using specific on-the-ground rewilding projects to enhance
carbon capture and storage. It will enhance the ability of policymakers to craft sound animal
climate solutions as well as assist decision making by conservation aimed at rewilding
nature for the dual purpose of mitigating climate change and reducing biodiversity loss.
2023:
● Two peer reviewed scientific papers – “Trophic Rewilding can expand natural climate
solutions” & “Animating the Carbon Cycle: How Wildlife Conservation Can be a Game-
Changer for Climate Mitigation” (Environment: Science and Policy for Sustainable
Development) – published
● ACC model developed, demonstrating how to best implement ACC in different
species/ecosystem constellations
● The ACC concept embedded in the CBD SBSTTA advisory on biodiversity and climate
change, developed for COP16
● Chapter on “Animating the carbon cycle through rewilding – a critical path for turning
the tide for a healthier planet” published in the UN Decade book “Nature Restoration”
● The critical role of ACC in the design and implementation of the UNCLOS High
Seas/BBNJ Treaty communicated at the negotiations, United Nations in New York 20
February to 3 March
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● The High Ambition Coalition for Nature and People and the High Ambition Coalition
on Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction have been informed about the strategic
connection between the 30x30 biodiversity target and climate mitigation &
adaptation, with the aim of having a ACC perspective adopted in their
implementation plans
2024:
● ACC Reference Book covering science, socio-economic, financing, policy, legal
aspects, and best practice has been published online
● Results considered fit for purpose by the academic community as well as
policymakers
● The ACC is proving its value for a number of conservation initiatives by providing
solid data and argumentation on the additional carbon sequestration impact of
conservation projects and targets
● 5-10 practical ACC initiatives identified, covering Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, Latin
America, and North America – with focal species and ecosystems
● Financial mechanisms identified – rewilding/biodiversity/carbon credits, etc.
● ACC activities incorporated in UNFCCC: Nationally Determined Contributions
(NDCs): (adding an ACC dimension to studies, like for Canada) and CBD: National
Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans (NSAPs)
2025:
● A longer-term ACC plan launched for how to meet the 500 GtCO2 target by 2100 (or
sooner)
KPIs:
● Inclusion of the ACC concept in CBD, UNFCCC & UNCLOS related processes
● Number of scientific and popular articles on ACC
● ACC reference book
● Number of practical ACC projects initiated
● An implementation plan for meeting the 500 GtCO2 target by 2100
Contacts:
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5. RESTORATION CHALLENGE -
COMMUNITIES
Indigenous peoples, women and local communities are pillars of conservation and
ecosystem restoration across the world (Coello and Frey, 2023). Local communities and
local level non-profit organizations including local community-based initiatives, civil society/
non-governmental organizations, or government-led initiatives and indigenous people and
local communities (IPLC) hold critical knowledge about restoration needs and potential
solutions (Coello and Frey, 2023). Participatory approaches and local restoration action are
fundamental for achieving the needed restoration successes (Coello and Frey, 2023).
The strategy of the UN Decade expresses that ecosystem restoration must occur on
different spatial scales from local to global levels. It is especially critical to include local
communities and indigenous peoples in restoration activities since they hold valuable
knowledge on restoration needs and potential solutions (IUCN 2021). It further highlights
that “[t]he secret to global success [...] lies in boosting the capacity of local leaders.”
(Anderson 2021).
5.1 Restore and secure land and resource rights to Indigenous Peoples and local
communities and recognise them as stewards of ecosystem restoration
Up to 2.5 billion women and men depend on land and natural resources that are held, used
or managed in common. They are farmers, pastoralists, fisherfolk, and forest keepers. They
protect more than 50% of the planet’s land surface, but governments recognize their
ownership rights over just 10%. Many of these communities are actively engaged in
ecosystem restoration as part of customary practice and a wealth of intergenerational
knowledge on the ecosystems on which they depend.
This challenge is to be led by and for Indigenous Peoples and local communities,
coordinated by a coalition of partners, with the following aims:
● Advance and promote locally led ecosystem restoration through providing visibility,
technical support, networks, access to funding and generation of community led
restoration flagships.
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The actions will focus on National, Regional and Global Advocacy. Voices of community
partners are amplified, community restoration flagships celebrated, and the impact of the
work is further scaled.
It is envisaged to build an enabling environment for supporting tenure security in the context
of restoration targets. In practice that means to mainstream the relevance of land tenure for
ecosystem restoration in relevant national (in countries where National Land Coalitions
exist), regional (such as regional conservation or climate summits) and intergovernmental
settings, such as the CBD, UNEP, IPBES, UNFCCC, UNCCD, IUCN or other meetings with a
restoration focus, and take advantage of opportunities such as the Global Year on
Pastoralists and Rangelands in 2026.
Activities include:
1) The first step will be to develop an in-depth work plan as the basis in a transparent
and inclusive process inviting stakeholder groups to contribute and particularly
Indigenous Peoples and Communities organization to become partners of the UN
Decade for this challenge. A draft work plan will be consulted among ILCs network
and partners . Likely activities will include:
A soft kickstarting event took place on 12 November 2022 at GLF Climate. See details here.
2) ILC’s National Land Coalitions (NLCs) for Ecosystem Restoration will advance,
recognize and promote tenure security of Indigenous Peoples, local communities,
small scale farmers and pastoralists as a critical pillar for ecosystem restoration
within national governments, together with partners. These NLCs are currently
established and have an impact in more than 30 countries and will be key for the
following activities:
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The aim is further to develop over 30 Indigenous Peoples and Local Community led
Restoration Flagships over the course of the UN Decade.
The International Land Coalition (ILC) is co(leading) this challenge together in collaboration
with some of its relevant regional platforms (which also include non ILC members),
including the ILC Asia Platform on Ecosystem Restoration and the Latin American Semiarid
Platform. More are likely to join.
KPIs:
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Timeline:
2023:
● Network wide consultations through targeted platforms including through at least
three regional platforms (see above) on locally based ecosystem management and
restoration as well as ILC’s Indigenous Peoples, women, youth and pastoralists
caucuses.
● Collective identification of clear targets and development of plan of work
● Programming and launching of global mobilization and awareness campaigns
around the theme
● Identification of National Land Coalitions to engage on policy and advocacy on
national level
● Engagement with existing datasets on tenure security and identifying critical data
sets for ecosystem restoration to be added. Of significance will be:
a) new global Prindex dataset collected via Gallup World Poll, expanding our
understanding of tenure security globally.
b) LANDex phase two collection begins, offering data in all National Land
Coalition countries by 2025.
2024:
● Equipment of National Land Coalitions with skills, tools and knowledge to engage
and report on UN Decade of Ecosystem Restoration
● Identification of community led restoration flagships, generation of baseline reports
● Identification of policy contexts most supportive of community based restoration
and sharing of good practices
● Formal status quo presentation during CBD COP16 with a focus on Target 2 and Art
8j
● Possible side event at UNCCD COP16
● Possible presentation of ensuring community led restoration flagships are presented
during 2024 Olympics awareness raising initiatives, in collaboration with UN Decade
Partners
2025:
● Global Land Forum held in Colombia, providing a global venue for presenting
consolidated data with a focus on tenure security and restoration
● Finalisation of LANDex data
● Implementation assessment
2026:
● Strategic Advocacy engagement during International Year of Pastoralists and
Rangelands through presentation of ongoing pastoralist led restoration flagships, eg.
during CBD COP 17
2028:
● Status quo report of restoration flagships
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2029:
● Mainstream and scaling of good practices
2030:
● Targets achievement and presentation of results at a number of opportunities (tbc)
and that correlate with end of UN Decade
International Land Coalition (ILC), ILC Asia Platform on Ecosystem Restoration, Semiaridos
Platform, UNEP
International Citizens' Environment Network (RICE) (tbc), UNEP, CIFOR/ICRAF (tbc), IFAD
(tbc), FAO (tbc), ICCA Consortium (tbc)
Contacts:
Johanna Von Braun: j.vonbraun@landcoalition.org
Elvira Maratova, ILC Asia Platform on Ecosystem Restoration,
ecosystem.restoration.platform@gmail.com
Ecosystem restoration projects are critical to solving the biodiversity crisis and
mitigating/adapting to the climate crisis. Despite massive investment in ecosystem
restoration around the globe, many struggle to meet their targets. It has been demonstrated
hat projects which have significant involvement from local communities - Indigenous or
otherwise - are more likely to succeed because they extend into the social, cultural and
indeed the spiritual fabric that stitch together people and place.
To help address the implementation gap and to contribute to the success of the UN Decade
on Ecosystem Restoration, the Center for Earth Ethics and future collaborators (to be
named) will embark on a dual pronged approach to 1) raise awareness in communities
across the world through community based dialogue and education; and 2) partnering with
ongoing restoration projects to discern, advise, and promote community engagement and
outreach to promote the successful adoption and acceleration of ecosystem restoration.
At global level, it will increase the global restoration movement by raising awareness and
increasing leadership of faith communities through 100 grassroots dialogues. Local faith
communities will be contacted and trained to conduct dialogues with local stakeholders on
ecosystem restoration. Formal training and guidance will be provided and an online platform
will be created to track the dialogues.
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KPIs:
● 5 World Restoration Restoration projects/flagships identified and working with the
VCS methodology.
Timeline:
2023:
● Dialogue: 50 grassroot dialogues with faith groups conducted
● Flagships:
○ Confirm Partnerships
○ Site Visits (x2) and Analysis
○ Report and Strategy Development
○ Implementation
2024:
● Dialogues: 50 grassroot dialogues with faith groups conducted
● Create an online platform to track the dialogues.
● Train local leaders.
● Flagships: - Site Visit (x2)
○ Measurements of Growth and KPIs
○ Analysis and Reporting
○ Augmentation of Strategy to build on successes and to correct failures
2025:
● Flagships:
○ Final Site Visits
○ Culminating Report
○ Recommendations for further adoption across broader set of sites
○ Identify future sites, begin process again
Funding:
To successfully maintain this project at a level befitting the vision, it will cost an estimated
$200,000. Costs include:
● Staffing: 145,000
● Travel and accommodation: 30,000
● Website Development: 15,000
● Equipment: 10,000
Total: 200,000
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Center for Earth Ethics, UNEP Faith for Earth, United Religions Initiative (tbc)
Contacts:
The aim of this challenge is to bring together all UN Decade partners and terrestrial
restoration efforts on a UN Decade partner hub, Restor, to assess its impact along key
metrics and help visualize the global movement. It will further link this community to an
extended global community of restoration and conservation stakeholders. The challenge is
led by the UN Decade Partner Restor, the largest network of conservation and restoration
sites across the globe and a global hub for terrestrial nature restoration where thousands of
local communities, NGOs, governments, and businesses share and monitor their projects.
Restor is developing impact reporting as premium functionality on the platform, which will
serve for the UN Decade to get regular, aggregated analysis of the impact of UN Decade
partner initiatives along key parameters such as carbon storage and potential supporting the
scientific evidence and analysis of a global restoration movement. UN Decade partners
joining the UN Decade portal on Restor will share data, knowledge and funding opportunities
with one another and the wider global restoration movement, complementary to FERM and
the Digital Hub.
Restor platform is also displaying the UN Decade Flagships Restoration case studies
focused on the 2022 World Flagship Initiatives. These case studies provide valuable insights
demonstrating how large-scale ecosystem restoration can be implemented through
effective national and multi-national partnerships and based on the best science and
technology available. These initiatives were selected based on their breadth and promise for
restoring ecosystems at large scale and in ways that illustrate adherence to the principles of
ecosystem restoration and adoption of best practices—both of these aspects will be
emphasized in the case study narratives. Each case study is researched, verified, and
updated in a systematized format by an independent group of researchers, including
interviews with the main practitioners.
UN Decade partners can further tell the story of their UN Decade initiatives in a consistent
and visually attractive way; access data to support remote-senses monitoring of progress
and impact of initiatives consistently and cost-effectively; benefit from funding opportunities
that arise through Restor's network of funders; connect to one another, and to the wider
global community, for learning and collaboration opportunities.
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KPIs:
● Number of UN Decade Partners and projects deriving value from Restor through
increased visibility, access to ecological insights and funding opportunities.
2023:
● Kick off customised and dedicated "outreach" campaign to UN Decade partners to
join the UN Decade portal in Restor.
● Kick off customised and dedicated "engagement" campaign to UN Decade partners
to drive active engagement on (and off) the UN Decade portal in Restor to ensure
that UN Decade partners are optimally represented with visually attractive profiles
and up-to-date data.
2024:
● Targeted communication campaigns around specific thematics e.g. mangrove
restoration, biodiversity impacts etc. These thematic campaigns can be framed
through UN Decade collections of theme-appropriate restoration projects.
● Kick off an impact reporting and analysis on the aggregate progress and impact of
UN Decade partner projects.
Restor
Contacts:
Stephanie Feeney, restor, stephanie@restor.eco
5.4 Rallying the international sports community to restore the planet, including the
Planet 2024 Conference during Paris Olympics 2024
Major sport events such as the Olympics can represent a great celebration for humanity, but
it also contributes to significantly accelerating nature degradation. Climate change,
deforestation, water pollution – the Olympics have contributed to them all. The Rio 2016
Games, for example, produced between 6,000+ tons of waste according to the Post-Games
sustainability report and 17,000+ tonnes according to other sources such as Forbes.
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To bring awareness and drive the momentum of the Paris Olympics 2024 as 15 millions
tourists, 15 000 athletes, 20 000 journalists and many private sponsors, a world campaign
entitled PLANET 2030 will be launched in 2024 (Planet 2024). This is a campaign on
ecosystem restoration and a major fundraising initiative from the private sector, dedicated
to supporting the restoration effort of local communities including farmers, pastoralists,
fisherfolk, and forest keepers. It aims to accelerate the nature restoration movement by
involving civil society and businesses.
This challenge focus on bring together the international sports community to promote
ecosystem restoration within the following aims:
PLANET 2024 (PLANET 2030 by extension) includes 6 activities (6 sub-projects) with are:
It will be the first Summit dedicated to nature restoration. The event will highlight The UN
Decade on Ecosystem Restoration 2021-2030, implemented for 2 categories: large
businesses and corporations, and civil society and NGOs.
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● Promoting and sharing the solutions adopted by businesses that help to protect
nature
The Nature Restoration Summit in 2024 will be the pilot and the objective is to replicate it by
organising 6 summits per year (Europe, North America, South America, Asia, Africa,
Australia).
About funding, the goal is to raise between $300M and $600M from the private companies
after each summit. Therefore, by the end of 2030, the goal is to raise between 2024 and
2030 $1,8 billion and $3,6 billion.
The first Ecosystem Restoration Center should be in Le Carrousel du Louvre (at Le Louvre
Museum in Paris) and will expect 2 millions visitors a year. The Center will be free for all
visitors and financially supported by sponsors from the private sector. About the Center in
Le Louvre (Paris, France);
The Center will help to raise funds to plant 100 million trees in Africa through visitor
donations. The Center in Paris would be a pilot and the objective is to replicate that initiative
in several cities across the continents.
With a focus on innovation, EXPLORE is a NEXT GEN ship dedicated to marine ecosystem
restoration, to driving expeditions to accelerate ocean conservation. Until 2030, EXPLORE
will make a world tour to actively contribute to coral reef restoration and also to provide
tools, training, techniques to coastal communities and local communities in order to amplify
the nature restoration initiatives.
EXPLORE will drive an ambitious restoration initiative of the marine ecosystem without
destroying the ocean. Concerned about the accelerating impacts of climate change,
EXPLORE will also contribute to transforming the marine industry in order to reduce its
greenhouse emissions.
The Nature Restoration book will present the wisdom, the vision, best practices and
recommendations of over one hundred experts –oceanographers, scientists indigenous
leaders, engineers, economists, biologists and artists to equip us all with the knowledge we
need to restore the world ecosystems: Forests, Oceans, Freshwaters, Grasslands,
Mountains, peatlands, urban areas.
RESTORE THE PLANET is Network of businesses and organizations in the public sector
taking concrete actions to tackle climate change and build a healthy planet for the next
generations. That initiative, launched by Free Spirit, was created to support the United
Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration 2021-2030. The network will help to share best
practices and highlight the benefits of nature restoration and the new climate economy.
6) Other activities
Free Spirit Foundation and its partners will organize, deploy and implement several activities
dedicated to raising public awareness on nature restoration.
● Art exhibitions,
● conferences, talks
● planting tree concerts,
● videos, fine Art photography,
● Happenings,
● 3D mapping
● Podcasts
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● The Nature Restoration Summit: raise between 2024 and 2030 $1,8 billion and $3,6
billion (by the end of 2030)
● The Ecosystem Restoration Center - Le Louvre in Paris:
○ Raising funds to plant 100 million trees in Africa through visitor donations
○ Educating 2 millions expected visitors within 12 months, on nature restoration
● EXPLORE - The Carbon zero vessel dedicated to marine restoration: training 100
000 individuals within coastal and local communities (1000 people per city/area)
around the world by 2030 and educating 100 000 people across the globe in order to:
○ teach local communities how to preserve nature
○ support them to become marine ecosystem restoration experts
○ become forest or farmlands restoration experts
○ educate 10 000 children on nature restoration
Timeline:
2023:
● Dialogue with potential partners:
○ Confirm Partnerships
○ Site Visits
2024:
● 100 millions trees planted with fundings raised by the restoration center
● Between 50 and 100 million dollars raised from the private sector a the Restoration
Summit in Paris
● 500 CEOs of big corporations at the Restoration Summit
● 1 billion people reached through the campaign (digital and physical campaigns on
nature restoration)
2025:
● 5 restoration centers across the globe including the center in Paris/Le louvre
museum
● 100 millions trees planted with fundings raised by the restoration center
● Between 300 and 600 million dollars raised from the private sector at each Nature
Restoration Summit in 6 cities across the globe (Europe, North America, South
America, Asia, Africa, Australia)
● Start of the world tour of the EXPLORE boat dedicated to restoration
2026/2027/2028/2029/2030:
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● 5 restoration center across the globe including the center in Paris/Le louvre museum
● 100 millions trees planted with fundings raised by the restoration center
● Between 300 and 600 million dollars raised from the private sector at each Nature
Restoration Summit in 6 cities across the globe (Europe, North America, South
America, Asia, Africa, Australia)
● Start of the world tour of the EXPLORE boat dedicated to restoration. EXPLORE will
help to educate 20 000 people across the globe in order to teach local communities
how to preserve nature and it will help to:
○ educate 2 000 people to help them to become marine ecosystem restoration
experts
○ educate 2 000 people to help them to become forest or farmlands restoration
experts
○ educate 2 000 children on nature restoration
Contacts:
Fabrice Hossa, President, Free Spirit Foundation, contact@freespiritfoundation.fr
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Education is vital to ensuring that future generations benefit from a greater understanding of
nature and an appreciation of its value (Dasgupta 2021). The overall goal of the Education
challenge is to educate the next generation of citizens to be aware of the value of nature,
and to train a generation of professionals who can scale up restoration efforts.
This Education Challenge goal is to embed Restoration Education (RE) within educational
systems as a critical element of Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). Based on the
development of a framework mapping existing initiatives, the leads build a common
agreement on quality lifelong learning outcomes for #GenerationRestoration and working
towards embedding Ecosystem Restoration into formal and non-formal educational settings
synergistically with the ESD for 2030 framework & roadmap and the Greening Education
Partnership.
Relevant resources exist in current educational systems but are labelled differently, i.e.,
nature, environmental, biodiversity education, climate education, nature-based solutions, etc
and often do not include restoration. This challenge creates a dynamic framework, allowing
for the evolution and adoption of good practices through collaborations at various levels.
The activities include situational analysis and mapping; establishing synergies between
existing efforts at multiple levels and in different regions; collecting and sharing existing
good practices; co-developing, with key stakeholders, a framework adaptable in multiple
contexts; demonstrating ways to embed it in diverse lifelong education contexts.
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KPIs:
Timeline:
2023:
● Establish an International Advisory Board to help guide the process. Together, we will
conduct an in-depth situational analysis to highlight existing resources and initiatives
and co-develop a toolkit with curricular recommendations, resources, and effective
practices to advance RE in all aspects of educational practice. It will facilitate the
development of an Action Plan, and its implementation, including fundraising,
monitoring progress and achievement of KPIs and adjusting activities according to
developments and changing situations. It will meet to discuss the educational
challenge action plan through virtual meetings as required, but also meet physically
through existing opportunities, including:
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2023/24:
● Conduct a situational analysis and aggregation of existing tools and resources on
Restoration Education, including curricular opportunities, projects, programmes and
good practices.
● Develop a fundraising proposal that will include a detailed action plan, an evaluation
plan and KPIs, and a dissemination and communication strategy.
2025:
● A Status Report, including good practices recommendations aligned with the ESD for
2030 framework & roadmap, and the Greening Education Partnership.
2025/27:
● Pilots and demonstration sites, including FEE’s Eco-Schools, LEAF Schools and
UNESCO Associated Schools, and those of various partners engaged with the
Decade.
2027/30:
● Advocate for embedding Restoration Education in Educational Systems as a key
component of the ESD for 2030 framework & roadmap and the Greening Education
Partnership.
2030:
● Final Report on embedding Ecosystems Restoration in national and regional
education contexts.
Foundation for Environmental Education (FEE), UNESCO, North American Association for
Environmental Education (NAAEE)
To be invited:
Contacts:
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This challenge aims at building a global network of rewilding professionals to design and
manage successful restoration and monitoring programmes benefiting local and global
communities. A growing number of institutions, students, businesses, land managers, policy
makers, investors and philanthropists are involved in efforts to help restore ecosystems.
Knowledge, skills, and equitable access to information will be vital to ensure the success
and sustainability of restoration efforts throughout the UN Decade and beyond.
Key activities:
● Develop, scale and engage a rewilding community of 2000 members focused on new
knowledge creation and sharing.
● Building up action-based subgroups based on members’ interests, involvement in
specific CoP themes, programmes, and volunteer groups.
● Build meaningful connections to catalyse and facilitate action on-the-ground.
● Organise meetings, presentations, Q&A sessions.
20 Rewilding Workshops/Events
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● Develop associated practical field work and internship opportunities that provide
learning opportunities in ecosystem restoration.
● Ecosystem Restoration Curricula
● Create partnerships with Universities from each continent.
● Develop context-specific Ecosystem Restoration Curricula and courses that will
prepare students and early-career professionals for work in this new sector,
increasing employment and enterprise opportunities.
Assessment / Evaluation:
The challenge will be by Rewilding Academy in partnership with Plant for the Planet and
Environment Agency Abu Dhabi.
KPIs:
● Engagement, knowledge and skills development;
● Number of students graduated
● Number of global collaborators.
Timeline:
Rewilding MOOC:
● January 2023 - August 2023 – Develop and launch a web-based MOOC with
international experts and practitioners.
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● May 2023 – Practical field work, internship and volunteer opportunities available and
accessible.
Ecosystem Restoration Curricula
● April 2023 – 1st curriculum launched
● December 2023 – 2nd curriculum developed and launched
● December 2024 – 3rd curriculum developed and launched
● December 2025 – 4th curriculum developed and launched
Rewilding Academy
Contacts:
6.3 Interactive Ecosystem Restoration Curriculum for youth and 5000 collaborative
partnerships
An online learning environment (the “nervous system”) will facilitate networking, knowledge
sharing, collaborative problem solving, capacity-development, student conferences and
engagement of learners in ecosystem restoration activities at the local, national and global
levels. Prominent eco-influencers and local practitioners will provide key inputs in the form
of first-person narratives that learners can identify themselves with. The project will connect
with e.g. the restoration challenge badges (6.5) and develop a certification system.
The project will develop 5000 collaborative partnerships with youth educational institutions
(3000), educators (2000) and influencers (100). Through these partnerships, we will adopt
inclusive, culturally and linguistically sensitive practices, make community connections, and
share new nature-based solutions.
The project partners will facilitate a consultative process and dialogue to reach broad
consensus around a comprehensive ecosystem restoration curriculum for youth among
youth groups, UN Decade partners, Universities, CSOs, influencers and other stakeholders.
This process should also help inform options as well as increasing awareness of the
Challenge goals. Workshops for collecting significant ideas or proposals will be conducted.
This will provide well-defined strategic and practical directions, including organisation
aspects, governance, financing of the programme as well concrete entry points to
strengthen the relationship between educational institutes, the project implementers and the
broader UN Decade partnership. The project will develop a multidirectional learning
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environment and work with a modular structure that will allow for context-specific content
and flexibility. This encourages customisation and innovation within the overall framework.
The challenge leaders will pilot the programme in a limited number of schools in different
countries to collect feedback and revise content. When the curriculum development cycle
ends, programme implementation will start, followed by an annual evaluation of the
effectiveness and impact of the programme. Pilot results will be presented at UNFCCC COP
28 in Abu Dhabi. The “Ecosystem Restoration through Education” programme will be
officially launched at the World Environmental Education Congress (WEEC) in Abu Dhabi in
January/February 2024. The project partners will organise onboarding and evaluation
sessions for teachers, educators and youth participants annually. An in-person regional
networking and exchange meeting of educators and participants will be held in 2025. Local
partners NGOs will be involved in the development, distribution and implementation of the
project as they will ensure the sustainability of this project in the future.
Activities include:
1. Planning
1.1 Forming the Curriculum Development Team
1.2 Involving youth and schools in the Curriculum Development Team
1.3 Stocktaking and needs assessment (already conducted by the Decade)
3. Implementation
3.1 Pilot test and revise ecosystem restoration curriculum
3.2 Establish 100 quality partnerships in phase 1
3.3. Workshop for teachers/educators
3.4 Disseminate educational content
3.4.1 Virtually (text, video, infographics)
3.4.2 In class, through partnered schools
3.5 Networking, social media campaigning
3.6 Webinars, online event organisation
3.7 Implement curriculum
The immediate outcome will be significantly more youth with the skills, knowledge and
qualifications to understand, develop and monitor ecosystem restoration projects. The
programme will increase their capacity to contribute to a sustainable future as the
curriculum will be built around four essential elements: participation, systems thinking,
regeneration, and sustainability. A strong multiplier effect is achieved when this new
Generation Restoration is connected with the innovative learning, networking and
dissemination facilities that the project will consolidate and enhance as part of the UN
Decade platform.
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In addition, the programme will provide youth with academic and professional development
opportunities.
Learners and schools will collaborate with local communities to implement habitat
restoration projects at school grounds and nearby natural areas that involve teachers,
parents, researchers and practitioners. As youth participate in practical ecosystem
restoration and monitoring activities, they relate to their natural environment and develop the
attitudes, knowledge, and skills necessary to become ecologically literate citizens. In
addition, a substantial body of educational material related to ecosystem restoration will be
developed throughout the duration of the project as well as the infrastructure, e.g. MOOC,
online courses and RCE, to promulgate and disseminate this information to a global
audience. Ecosystem restoration requires an inclusive approach that appeals to and involves
everyone.
The challenge will be led by Rewilding Academy, Plant for the Planet, and the Environment
Agency Abu Dhabi.
KPIs:
● Develop 5000 collaborative partnerships with youth educational institutions (3000),
educators (2000) and influencers (100)
Timeline:
2023:
● Delivery of curriculum and education materials
● Delivery of teacher / educators workshops and MOOC (quarterly)
● Piloting two courses in two countries for two different age groups.
● Present pilot results at UNFCCC COP 28, Abu Dhabi
2024:
● Launch of “Ecosystem Restoration through Education” programme at the World
Environmental Education Congress (WEEC) in Abu Dhabi.
● Onboarding session for teachers, educators and youth participants (quarterly)
● UN Environment Assembly of the UN Environment Programme, Nairobi
● Start of school-based ecosystem restoration projects
● Online dialogue session for educators
● Participatory evaluation of programme and platforms (annually)
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2025:
● Presentation on progress of school-based ecosystem restoration projects
● In-person regional networking and exchange meeting of educators and participants
2024-2030:
● Partnerships with eco-influencers, institutions, educators and practitioners
developed
● Deliver additional education modules and language versions
Rewilding Academy, Plant for the Planet, Environment Agency Abu Dhabi
Contacts:
The 12th World Environmental Education Congress (WEEC) in Abu Dhabi early 2024
represents a unique opportunity and first milestone for this challenge in promoting
Ecosystem Restoration as part of the global environmental education agenda and
presenting the challenge. The annual Abu Dhabi Environmental Film Festival will also raise
awareness along the decade.
For 2026–2029, it is envisaged that EAD will develop an online training platform for schools
and the wider community called E-Green, for which modules can be developed that provide
additional support for those involved in ecosystem restoration.
2023:
● The establishment of a Regional Centre of Expertise (RCE)
● Build case and submit application for Regional Centre of Expertise (RCE) status)
2024: Announce launch of RCE at World Environmental Education Congress in Abu Dhabi)
2025: Build content and partnerships for RCE)
2026: Promulgating Best Practice in education for sustainable development with a focus on
ecosystem restoration)
2027: Continue to expand membership of RCE
2028: Formally embed ecosystem restoration in curricula
2029: Continual review and improvement
2030: Final Reporting and lesson learnt
Contacts:
Universities have a substantial role to play in urgently moving from degrading nature to
restoring it: our students are our future leaders, we create knowledge and nurture thinkers,
and we directly impact the planet as landowners and consumers. Uniting universities for
ecosystem restoration therefore has a wider impact into our local communities and beyond.
The aim is to have universities who have committed to a Nature Positive Journey on every
continent, measuring their baseline, setting ambitious targets for nature, carrying out actions
and using their influence to meet their targets, and reporting publicly on their progress. In
addition we will work with students around the world to enable them to take action for
nature on their campuses, while also supporting them to advocate for their institutions, and
other actors within their communities, to join the Nature Positive journey.
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Activities include:
1. University Pledges: The core of the initiative is Universities making a high level Nature
Positive Pledge, to complement climate targets such as net zero. The Pledge must be taken
by senior management, and has four aspects:
3. Regional Hubs: In support of making the Nature Positive Pledge, regional hubs are
established to share best practice and experience from our wider network, within regional
contexts, as they progress on their Nature Positive journeys.
KPIs:
● Number of 1) universities pledged, 2) student ambassadors, 3) universities in wider
network, 4) regional hubs
Timeline:
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2022: Launch pledge campaign at COP15 with 100 university pledges on board, with
members from 500 universities having joined the wider network and 150 student
ambassadors championing this across the world.
2023: Wider network expanded to 600; 150 university pledges across 50 countries; 200
student ambassadors engaged; 2 regional hubs set up; Nature Positive guidance and
Student Toolkit produced.
2024: Progress reported on university pledges with clear reporting mechanism in place;
Clear student ambassador Theory of Change developed; 3 regional hubs set up.
2025: Wider network expanded to 1000 members; 200 university pledges across 50
countries; 250 active student ambassadors; 5 regional hubs in total set up and maintained;
All pledged universities report on progress annually.
2026-2030: Scale up
Contacts:
This challenge aims to inform, involve and empower the global #GenerationRestoration
Youth to enact change within their local communities and develop local networks of
ecosystem restorers across the globe. Based on the success of YUNGA Challenge badges,
this challenge aims to positively changing behaviours of young people between the ages of
5 - 18. These behaviours include the destruction of ecosystems indirectly through our
actions, including through overconsumption and pollution. Whilst also developing the
capacities and skill sets required to effectively contribute to ecosystem restoration, these
include project management, time management, risk assessment, plant and species
identification, etc.
Groups that decide to undertake the challenge badge will be provided with the challenge
badge booklet. This has 2 main sections (background information and challenge badge
curriculum). Both of these sections are broken down into 4 sub sections (Understanding the
basics of ecosystems, main threats to ecosystems, what ecosystem restoration is, and
taking action for the decade). Background Information will be used for teachers, guides, and
older students interested in understanding the topics.
The curriculum section will have activities related to each of the sub sections. In each
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subsection there are 2 compulsory activities and several optional activities. Participants
must choose one compulsory activity and one optional activity in each section. Once each
section has been completed, the groups can be rewarded with their challenge badge. The
curriculum section is further divided into age categories. There are activities specifically
designed for ages 5-10, 11-15 and 16+.
Integrated into all activities is the notion of behaviour change. These activities not only
inform young people around specific issues in the UN Decade but also aim to develop their
capacities to become agents of change and help protect and restore ecosystems in their
local communities.
The challenge will be led by the Youth United Nations Global Alliance (YUNGA), UN Decade
Youth Task Force, UNESCO.
KPIs:
● Deliver the challenge badge to every sub region of the world through at least one
local group
● Engage x young people between the ages of 5-18
Timeline:
2022
● Official Launch via learning session
● Complete draft process
2023
● Offer pilot opportunity to groups
● Begin pilot of badge curriculum
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2024
● Successfully delivered the challenge badge to one group in every sub region of the
world
2025
● Local groups continue to deliver the challenge badge in every sub region of the world
Youth United Nations Global Alliance (YUNGA), UN Decade Youth Task Force, UNESCO,
World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (tbc)
Contacts:
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According to the State of Finance for Nature Report (2021) “to meet future climate,
biodiversity and land degradation targets, public and private actors will need to scale up their
annual investments by at least four times over the next three decades. By 2050, total
investment needs will amount to USD 8.4 trillion cumulatively, reaching over USD 536 billion
per year, four times the amount invested today.” Most of the assessed ecosystem services
are already declining globally (IPBES 2019), posing an additional challenge since WEF 2020
estimates that more than half the world’s GDP (USD 44 trillion) is generated by sectors that
are directly dependent on ecosystem services.
The need for more action and funding to scale up restoration are urgent. Considering the
current scenario, the UN Decade Finance challenge aims to support closing the financial gap
for restoration by working on stakeholders’ engagement at the government and sectoral
policy levers, financial sector regulation, and markets and investment instruments.
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Activities:
The Finance Challenge represents the work of the UN Decade’s Finance Task Force which is
chaired by the World Bank and has been providing guidance to reorient subsidies towards
ecosystem restoration in an appropriate manner; countering economic forces and vested
interests that result in ecosystem degradation; and, incentivizing public and corporate
investors to co-invest in ecosystem restoration, including in areas where the benefits from
restoration are predominantly public goods. This represents a unique opportunity to work
closely with the World Bank, a “unique global partnership fighting poverty worldwide through
sustainable solutions”. Among the Finance TF contributions, the “Scaling up ecosystem
restoration finance – A Stocktake Report” stands out by highlighting the current challenges
and opportunities for increasing public and private investment in restoration.
To achieve this ambitious challenge, UN Decade TF will be working in partnership with other
UN Decade Partners volunteering to be part of this challenge.
The Challenge goals indicated above will directly contribute and are aligned with the:
KPIs:
● Identify X partners to promote their work in restoration
● Review of key financial sector regulation, guidance, and analytical tools
● X Templates for replicable or scalable investment structures
● Publish assessing Monitoring, Reporting and Verification (MRV) cost reductions
trends and barriers
Contacts:
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Connect donors with the people restoring ecosystems on the ground, ● Private sector
through the UN Decade Digital Hub and other platforms such as ● NGOs and CSOs
Restor and the World Resources Institute’s Global Restoration ● Individuals and
Initiative. communities
● Donors and
financial
institutions
Shift incentives from land degradation towards restoration using ● National
subsidies and taxes and provide risk mitigating mechanisms to governments
incentivise private investment in restoration (e.g. green, blue, and ● Donors and
resilience bonds, credit guarantees). Direct revenues from carbon financial
pricing to protect and restore ecosystems. institutions
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8.1 Restore and regenerate productive ecosystems to increase local communities food
security
The overarching goal of this challenge is to create and upscaling world-class eco-restoration
model camps which will systemically increase food security, strengthen local communities’
resilience, and create job opportunities through entrepreneurial agri-culture, agroforestry, eco-
tourism, agro-tourism, and eco-agri-food awareness & education . It specifically aims at:
For maximum impact and sustainability, the challenge is institutionalized and guided by well-
thought mission, goals, objectives, vision and theme as highlighted below:
● The Theme: Restore and regenerate productive ecosystems to achieve zero hunger by
2030.
● The Overall Goal: To create and upscaling world-class eco-restoration model camps
which will systemically increase food security, strengthen local communities’
resilience, and create decent job opportunities.
● Main Aim: To establish five new world-class eco-restoration model camps, upgrading
five existing eco-camps to world class eco-restoration model camps that will serve as
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newer world eco-tour destinations while transforming ten existing refugee camps into
zero hunger hubs that empower the refugees to govern the refugee-specific eco-agri-
food value chain that guarantees zero hunger across specific refugee camps.
● The Vision: To co-create vibrant and newer restorative grassroots-communities that
invest in cross-cutting eco-restoration camps as the most viable solution to the
overarching socio-economic and ecological problems of the twenty first century.
● The Mission: To spur community-led, inclusive, participatory and sustainable socio-
economic development through systemic implementation of the eco-restoration
model camps.
The Challenge is structured in three (3) main pathways: New Eco-Restoration Camps, Zero
Hunger-Refugee Camps, and Existing Eco-Camps.
Pathway II: Zero Hunger-Refugee Camps - transforming existing refugee camps into zero
hunger hubs that empower the refugees to govern the refugee-specific eco-agri-food value
chain that guarantees zero hunger and decent restorative job opportunities across those
refugee camps and beyond. They are further multi-dimensionally refashioned to serve as the
global eco-tourism destinations. The on-the-ground ecosystem restoration activities will
strengthen beyond the refugee camps to restoring degraded land while regenerating
productive ecosystems.
Pathway III: Existing Eco-Camps – upgrading existing eco-camps into world class eco-
restoration model camps that serve as the global eco-tourism destinations. They are further
standardized into sustainable avenues of zero hunger and decent restorative job
opportunities. These existing eco-camps will broaden their operation to intricately restore
degraded land while regenerating productive ecosystems.
Achieving systemic ecosystem restoration requires innovative ideas, creativity and actionable
commitments in shifting decision-making power and agenda-setting to the people affected
directly by degraded ecosystems. The individuals and institutions championing for effective
ecosystem restoration need to create their effort in partnership with the local communities;
by strengthening the capacities of local communities themselves through empowerment of
the local actors and local partners to lead from the centre of networked planning and design,
implementation, monitoring and evaluation, and maintenance by a means of collaborative
sensemaking.
For example, the consortium could decide to establish the global Advisory Council Team
(ACT) at the highest level, comprising 5-9 members. The ACT will provide high-level
coordination, strategic advice, and elicit the commitments needed for the realization of the
UN Decade food challenge’s consortium goals and priorities. At the second level, the more
broad consortium’s global Co-Management Committee (CMC) chaired by the consortium’s
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lead agency with two co-chairs from the co-lead agencies and having its operation-focused
sub-committees such as Resource Mobilization Sub-committee, is envisioned to provide more
direct leadership oversight on this food challenge and the consortium, confirming that the
consortium practices and programming increasingly reflect the principles laid out in the
challenge/consortium policy and approving the priority actions provided in annual
implementation plans.
At the working level, the global consortium’s secretariat (The Secretariat) will be responsible
for developing the annual plans and coordinating their implementation. At the country-level,
the consortium shall establish the Country Implementation Committee (CIC) with
representation from the lead agency’s country office, co-lead agencies’ country offices, two
country local anchor’s representatives, and representatives from any other key consortium
member. The CIC is to provide more direct leadership oversight on the implementation of
specific projects implemented within the selected country (say, Victoria Eco-Restoration
Camp Project and Zero Hunger-Refugee Camp Kakuma Project in Kenya) while the day-to-day
activities will be carried out by the Project Implementation Committee (PIC) led by the Project
Manager and as will be established by the consortium’s lead and co-leads.
Based on recurring concerns by local actors about how international donors and other
international organizations usually comprehend and support them, CERC is embracing
horizontal power-sharing dynamics that bring together and enable diverse
stakeholders/partners/actors across sectors (private sector, public sector, nonprofit sector,
and funding/donor community) across all levels (community, sub-national, national, regional
and international levels) to leverage collective expertise and resources. This kind of working
together inherently involves identifying and actionizing jointly set objectives, strengthening
capacities, and measuring change over time.
This relational power-shift by the CERC intends to empower country local actors to support
more robust and resilient communities that are more inclusive of diverse voices and
backgrounds for expanded regenerative opportunities that bring about transformational
change for sustainable development; focusing on empowering the most vulnerable
communities and promising local organizations who may otherwise face discrimination, legal
and socio-economic exclusion, and institutional incapacities as the local champions of
change. The consortium will (preferably) empower one promising indigenous
community/country-based nonprofit organization (small or big, established or startup) as its
country local anchor to host all the consortium activities at the country level.
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KPI:
● Twenty-model-camps operationalized.
● xxx-thousand decent youth-restorative-jobs generated.
● xxx-billion-dollars mobilised.
● Twenty-country-local-anchors empowered.
Timeline:
The challenge opts to pilot its first two eco-restoration model camps in Kenya under the
proposed name “Victoria Eco-Restoration Camp” for Pathway I and Kakuma Zero Hunger-
Refugee Camp” for Pathway II thereafter the remaining eighteen (18) proposed eco-
restoration camps will be implemented as will be agreed, up to the year 2030 or beyond.
The proposed activities for the Victoria Eco-Restoration Camp are organized around five
project components include:
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Activity 2.1: Actualizing the “One School, Five Thousand Trees” drive
Activity 2.2: Implementing Holistic School Ecosystem Restoration Education for both
learners and teachers
Activity 2.3: Capacity building for the selected teachers, class representatives, and
school-based eco-clubs/environment club leaders
Activity 4.5: Generation Restoration Open Space and Beautification Drive (3 acres)
Activity 5.1: Empowering a local partner /Grassroots AgriFood Ventures (GAV) as the
Community Anchor for this project
Activity 5.2: Empowering village-based self-help youth groups as the community eco-
preneurship focal points
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Activity 5.3: Sensitizing host and local communities within the Great Lake Region
about the Victoria Eco-Restoration Camp Project and the UN Decade on Ecosystem
Restoration call
The proposed activities for the Kakuma Zero Hunger -Refugee Camp are organized around
five project components include:
Activity 1.1: Establishing 1,000 hydroponic units (?) for sustained food security with
“Objectives 1.1.1, 1.1.2, 1.2.1, and 1.2.2”
Component 4: Zero Hunger Demo/ Model Farms and Community Food and Nutrition
Champions with “Objectives 4.1.1 and 4.1.2”
The UN Decade Youth Task Force, Ecosystem Restoration Camps Movement, Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO)
Contacts:
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The strategy of the UN Decade suggests the creation of a Panel comprising a multi-
disciplinary team of thought leaders, leading cultural voices, environmental activists,
Indigenous Peoples, experts and opinion-makers to be established at the outset of the UN
Decade.
Under the heading ‘Our Humanature Pathways’, the panel will provide a platform for
discussions addressing core questions on humanity’s role in establishing a healthy and
harmonic relationship with nature. The appropriate format and outputs remain the Panel’s
decision with administrative support from UNESCO as leading UN Decade partner, in
collaboration with UNEP and FAO.
The panel will build on the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda and the updated global
agenda on Biodiversity, including the post-2020 global biodiversity framework (CBD COP15,
IUCN 2021 Congress), Climate Change (UNFCCC COP26) and the UNCCD Land Degradation
Neutrality targets.
The Panel will run over the course of two years (2023-2025). It will not aim to define
restoration goals or predict the future, but instead at providing an analysis on how humanity
has reached the threshold point where ecosystems worldwide are degraded in its majority
and the planet pushed beyond its boundaries, thereby threatening the ecosystem services
which sustain humanity’s own survival.
1) Set up the Panel and ensure that it is enabled to fulfill its stated functions.
2) With a grounding in interactive and transdisciplinary approaches, assemble, consider
and analyse diverse visions and understandings of the major challenges of humanity.
3) Publish a series of papers, statements and other and materials reflecting the Panel’s
work.
4) Share knowledge and reflect on the importance of the three pillars for achieving the
ambitious goal of having 100% of humans living in harmony with nature (Ethics,
Education and Culture).
5) Identify bottlenecks holding back the attainment of sustainability and provide
possible solutions, best practices, and successful stories around the world in order to
address transformational change collectively.
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KPIs:
Four outputs will be delivered:
Timeline:
2022:
● Panel announcement at the Restoration Day held at the Rio Pavilion, CBD COP15 in
Montreal, Canada
2023:
● First formal meeting of panel, early 2023
● Consolidation of panel workplan, list of major international events, April 2023
● Interactive dialogue with stakeholders, media, May 2023
● Intervention of Panel at key events (UNFCCC COP, CBD COP, agency governing
bodies), November-December 2023
2024:
● Dissemination of key findings and evaluation, August 2024
● Final interactive dialogue with stakeholders, presentation of findings, reports and
publications, December 2024
● Launch of documentary feature, 2025.
Contacts:
9.2 100 partners develop strategies and implement actions for valuing, accounting
for and sustainably utilizing nature
This challenge aims to contribute substantially to three ‘shifts’ identified as essential for the
world to protect biodiversity, enhance the resilience of ecosystems and harness the power
of nature towards achievement of the 2030 Agenda. These three systematic shifts are:
Global Narrative (Valuing Nature); Economic and Finance (Accounting for Nature); and Policy
and Practice (Harnessing the Power of Nature); led by UNDP.
This will be done this by pursuing several action tracks under each of these:
On the Global Narrative Shift, UNDP will pursue two action tracks: Creating new norms and
enabling conditions for nature-positive development and nature-positive economic decision-
making; and catalysing rapid global behaviour shifts through strategic engagements, local
action and leveraging legal and human rights instruments.
For the Economic and Finance Shift, UNDP will contribute to a transformation of financial
and economic systems to redirect flows from nature-negative to nature-positive, by:
accelerating adoption of tailored economic, fiscal and monetary policies, tools and plans
integrating nature-positive goals and actions in national and sub-national recovery and
development programmes, and key economic sector investment and subsidy plans; and
mobilizing and upscaling private investment in nature-positive actions, while reducing
financing of nature-negative business processes.
For the Policy and Practice Shift, the goal of which is to harness the power of nature to
tackle multi development challenges, UNDP will pursue four action tracks: Upscaling nature-
based solutions targeting climate action, poverty reduction and inclusive growth, job
creation, disaster and conflict prevention and pandemic prevention; mainstreaming nature
into development, production sectors and land/water/marine area policy, planning and
practices; strengthening coverage, governance, and management of terrestrial and marine
protected and conserved areas, including indigenous and community conserved areas; and
accelerating and upscaling sustainable land and water management and ecosystem
restoration.
Actions:
This challenge will seek to engage governments, real sector companies and financial
institutions to reform the financial system to become more nature-positive, and for
economic decision-making to transition towards more regenerative investments and to
internalise environmental externalities. UNDP is part of a large coalition of diverse partners
that form the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosure (TNFD) Forum, a global multi-
disciplinary consultative group of institutions with over 700 Forum members from a broad
range of institutional types, including corporates, financial institutions, public sector
institutions including regulators, pension funds and sovereign wealth funds, academic and
research organisations, business associations, inter-governmental organisations, as well as
conservation and civil society organisations. UNDP has already worked with a few
governments to assess their readiness for nature-related disclosures National readiness for
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nature-related disclosures in emerging markets | BIOFIN and has extensive work under the
broader programme called Biodiversity Finance Initiative (BIOFIN) that is designed to
support this type of work. UNDP also has a corporate offer on SDG finance/sustainable
finance that also focuses on risk insurance, including insurance for natural capital and will
continue to grow this work as part of its new and emerging Nature Strategy in line with
UNDP’s 2022-2025.
Activities:
Integrating nature into the SDGs, and in particular national development plans of countries is
a key step towards triggering systemic shifts in how nature is valued, accounted for and
used at all levels of society. UNDP will therefore focus its support towards influencing
national development and financing frameworks of countries, including at sub-national
levels, as well as the financing and investment decisions of private sector entities. UNDP will
partner with multiple entities, including CSOs, scientific research and academic
communities, Indigenous People and Local Communities (IPLCs) to collect, analyse,
package data and information and disseminate it to contribute to global shifts in awareness,
attitudes, actions and behaviours to better account for the value of nature. The following
activities will be key:
D. UNDP will develop a global tool for monitoring progress towards terrestrial
ecosystem restoration for use by its partners, including government and CSOs
implementing restoration initiatives.
Implementation of this challenge will facilitate increased awareness, dialogue and inspire
action for individuals, groups, communities, governments and private entities to take steps
to reduce nature-negative investments, repurpose current investments that contribute to
nature loss and degradation of ecosystems towards those that protect, conserve and
restore nature and sustainably use the goods and services from natural ecosystems. By
promoting the valuation of nature and the formal recognition of its role in the economic
development of countries and the financial performance of companies and organisations,
the challenge will contribute towards informed decision-making by these entities to invest
more in its protection, conservation and sustainable use. It will also raise increased
awareness about the benefits of investing in the restoration of degraded ecosystems to
generate ecosystem goods and services that are essential for livelihoods, economic
development and financial performance of communities, countries and businesses,
respectively.
KPIs:
● 100 partners (governments, entities) develop strategies and implement actions for
valuing, accounting for and sustainably utilizing nature.
Timeline:
2022:
● Contribute to the development of a risk management and disclosure framework for
organisations to report and act on evolving nature-related risks.
2023:
● Identify the 100 countries and entities to work closely with on the Economic and
Finance Systemic Shift.
2027:
● 100 countries complete their national biodiversity finance plans.
2030:
● UNDP contributes to the elimination, redirection or repurposing toward nature-
positive outcomes, of at least $500 billion in the value of subsidies and other
incentives that are harmful to biodiversity.
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), 1000 Landscapes for 1 Billion People
(tbc)
Contacts:
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Religious and spiritual traditions view nature, species, the environment, and the proper
functioning of ecosystems as expressions of - and critical to - their faith and values.
UNEP Faith for Earth intends to lead a series of consultative studies about at least 5 garden
traditions (Islam, Christianity, Hinduism and 2 others) towards producing a toolkit on
spiritual, green spaces demonstrating both small scale (community-level) and large scale
(large areas/landscapes) good practices for restoration.
Through a series of webinars, “Our Spiritual Garden Tradition” will explore how each of the
faith traditions conceptualise, celebrate and rely on green spaces– from its spiritual
relevance, to significant design elements, and where relevant central species (plants and
animals).
The crux of this project is the inclusion of practical examples – how institutions belonging to
each faith tradition actualise the ‘spiritual garden’ with an interest in resource and energy
efficiency, water management, contribute to cooling, provide a model for food production,
soil health, improving air quality, and more, demonstrating how modern techniques work in
support of spiritual expressions through nature. The toolkit will demonstrate how spirituality
enhances an understanding of cultural and ecosystem services and is a driver for a
revitalised way of designing spaces.
The consultation and resulting toolkit will provide individuals, communities and institutions
with a guide for intentional, spiritual and sustainable green spaces.
This project leverages both the technical and scholarly (religion and ecology) expertise of
institutions like the Quranic Botanic Garden, Aga Khan Trust for Culture, Yale Forum for
Religion and Ecology, Living Chapel (all tbc) and FBOs exploring ‘spiritual gardens’ as
symbols of peace, sustainability, resource efficiency, and faith.
The Challenge will be led by UNEP Faith for Earth Initiative, whose mission is to encourage,
empower and engage with faith-based organizations as partners, at all levels, toward
achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and fulfilling the 2030 Agenda.
KPIs:
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● Engage 5-7 thematic partners on sustainable green spaces and the role of faith and
spirituality enriching literature about the impact of cultural services on ecosystems
and communities.
Timeline:
● January 2023 – April 2023: Scoping of spiritual gardens and applied sustainable
practices. Engage institutional focal points to strengthen preliminary concept notes.
● April 2023 – May 2023: Engage technical partners in preparation for the consultative
study.
● May 2023: Introductory webinar (framing, objectives, how to engage, what to expect).
● June 2023 – September 2023: Facilitate 5 webinars exploring the nexus between
garden traditions, sustainable green spaces, and urban areas.
● September 2023 – October 2023: Design and publish a toolkit bringing together the
results of the consultative study.
● October/November 2023: Launch of the toolkit
UNEP
Contacts:
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Covering more than 70 per cent of the Earth's surface, our Ocean and seas support the
livelihoods and nutritional needs of billions of people and are home to millions of species.
Marine ecosystem services provide more than 60% of the economic value of the global
biosphere with 1 in 10 people relying on marine fisheries and aquaculture for their
livelihoods. The Ocean, from which life itself emerged, also makes life on earth habitable,
regulating weather and temperature patterns while serving as a critically important carbon
sink through ecosystems such as mangroves, seagrasses, salt marshes and chemical
processes. Some estimates say that the Ocean is currently absorbing as much as 90% of the
additional heat that carbon emissions have trapped in our atmosphere - which has slowed
the visible impacts of a warming planet – but at its own peril.
2/3 of the Ocean has been negatively impacted by human activity - from pollution, coastal
development and unsustainable fisheries to climate change - driven by unstainable
consumption and production and perverse subsidies. Governments are still paying more to
exploit nature than to protect it. Globally, countries spend some 4 to 6 trillion dollars a year
on subsidies that damage the environment. Altogether, these drivers jeopardize the ability of
the ocean to provide ecosystem services for human and planetary well-being. Reversing this
trend requires widespread changes in how we manage our economic activities in and
around marine and coastal areas. There is a need for immediate intervention and innovation
by governments and the private sector to transform our relationship with the Ocean from
business as usual; from irresponsible, careless consumption to informed custodianship.
The Restoration Challenge for Marine & Freshwater aims to revive healthy coastal, marine
and freshwater ecosystems by 2030.
80% of life on our blue planet is found in the Ocean. Yet, 80% of the Ocean remains
unexplored, with 91% of its species still undescribed. We know more about the moon, and
continue to spend more to understand and explore it. However, opportunities and services to
humanity that rely on the Ocean are massive; limited only by our imagination and will. To
date, we have taken these services for granted and followed opportunity with total disregard
for Ocean health. We are now at a tipping point: either we transition to a new model – a
model that considers the Whole Ocean, from its coastal ecosystems to its hadal depths, and
that navigates a sustainable blue economy where our activities sustain both human
aspiration and Ocean health - or risk it all at our own peril. There has never been a better- or
even possible -time given the advances in science and technology that are necessary for
safely exploring, mapping, monitoring and leveraging these opportunities. Beyond this, we
are also now living in the UN Decades of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development and
Ecosystem Restoration. As stated by the UN Secretary- General, “it’s time to make peace
with nature.” We believe it’s time for a (sustainable) moonshot for our Ocean.
The UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration 2021-2030 and UN Decade of Ocean Science for
Sustainable Development 2021-2030 jointly provide a unique opportunity to catalyze the
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transformation we need for the Ocean and we want through an Ocean Innovation and
Restoration Challenge towards 2030 that will ambitiously innovate solutions to conserve and
restore the world’s marine and coastal ecosystems, in turn enhancing the resilience of the
coastal communities and the societies depending on them.
● Catalyse momentum for activities that support the objectives of the decades of
ecosystem restoration and ocean science for sustainability;
● Champion an overarching SMART global goal for marine and coastal ecosystem
restoration (EEZ), leveraging the best available science and aligned to the UNFCCC
Ocean and Climate programme (Under the Marakesh and others);
● Identify specific and measurable restoration goals by ecosystem; e.g.,cold and warm
water corals, sponges, seagrass (mapping/representing in MPAs and other
conservation management tools as underrepresented), kelp, salt marsh, mangrove,
etc.;
● Prioritize those hotpots in need of the most urgent restoration action through the
challenge - focus on climate refugia across most vulnerable systems to climate
change identified by IPCC- tropical coral reefs, seagrass, kelp;
● Complement and help deliver the CBD Global Biodiversity Framework – innovate, fast
track, measure, monitor;
● Accelerate the commitment of governments, non-governmental organizations and
the private sector for the protection and restoration of specific marine and coastal
ecosystems by 2030.
● Build ocean literacy and innovative solutions to halt ocean degradation and restore
ecosystems;
● Synergize and build on evidence-base knowledge reports, e.g. UNEP’s Coral Reef
Restoration Report etc.;
● Catalyze & link targeted and policy-oriented research initiatives;
● Identify strategic partners and champions to raise awareness and serve as
advocates;
● Develop and realize a resource mobilization strategy and plan;
● Support the Decade of Restoration three action pathways:
o Pathway I “Global movement” will generate a peer-driven, participatory global
movement that focuses on upscaling restoration.
o Pathway II “Political will” will empower leaders in the public and private
sectors to champion restoration.
o Pathway III “Delivery at scale” will generate the technical capacity that is
needed to restore ecosystems at scale.
● Position Country Champions as leaders in the movement towards 100% responsibly
managed ocean with 30x30 + Challenge restoration targets as the engines for ocean
replenishment.
The Ocean Challenge is inspired by the Bonn Challenge, which was established in 2011 by
the Government of Germany and IUCN, as a global goal to bring 350 million hectares of
degraded and deforested landscapes into restoration by 2030. To date, the initiative has
been instrumental in gaining the commitment of 74 countries, conservation alliances and
private entities to bring over 210 million hectares of land under restoration. While the spatial
target of 30x30 is gaining traction, no restoration target for the ocean currently exists.
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KPIs:
Timeline (tbc)
UNEP
Contacts:
10.2 Bringing 300,000 km of rivers and 350 million hectares of wetlands under
restoration by 2030
Healthy freshwater[1] ecosystems are essential for all aspects of life, central to tackling the
climate and nature crises, and fundamental to sustainable development. These ecosystems
supply water and food to billions of people; drive water, carbon and nutrient cycles; provide
habitats for 10 percent of all species; and enable the productive use of water for agriculture,
energy generation, navigation and employment. Yet they continue to be damaged and
degraded.
Only 1/3rd of long rivers are still free flowing and the world has lost 1/3rd of its wetlands
since 1970. Meanwhile, pollution poses a grave threat to people and nature. The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded that climate change is
already impacting freshwater systems by altering rainfall patterns, melting glaciers and
changing river flows - and that the situation is only going to get worse.
Restoring healthy freshwater ecosystems is critical to global efforts to mitigate and adapt to
climate change, including extreme floods, droughts and storms. These disasters result in
loss of lives, livelihoods, food security and infrastructure, and indirectly cause
unemployment, migration and social unrest. Investing in healthy rivers, lakes and wetlands,
especially ensuring their connectivity, and particularly through Nature-based Solutions (NbS),
will build more climate resilient societies and economies. It will also help to tackle nature
loss and reverse the 83 percent fall in freshwater species populations since 1970.
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The important role of healthy freshwater ecosystems has been recognized in key
international development frameworks, including the Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs), Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), UN Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC), UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), Ramsar Convention
on Wetlands and Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction. But these ecosystems are
still undervalued and overlooked, undermining efforts to tackle the climate and nature crises,
and drive sustainable development.
For this reason, the government of Colombia, together with the governments of the
Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Kazakhstan, Gabon, Mexico, and The Netherlands
launched a Freshwater Challenge Call for Action at the CBD Conference of the Parties
(COP15) in 2022 in Montreal. Under the Decade of Ecosystem Restoration, the Freshwater
Challenge calls on governments and partners to bring 300,000 km of rivers and 350 million
hectares of wetlands under restoration by 2030 to reverse nature loss, safeguard the
delivery of critical ecosystem services, and strengthen climate resilience.
The aim of this Challenge is a country-driven initiative that aims at leveraging the support
needed to bring 300,000 km of rivers and 350 million hectares of wetlands under
restoration by 2030. These figures equal 30 percent of degraded freshwater ecosystems.[2]
Based on nationally-identified priorities, the Challenge will take an inclusive and collaborative
approach to implementation where governments and their partners will mobilize resources
and expertise to support the definition and implementation of freshwater restoration targets
and co-create solutions with indigenous people, local communities and other national and
international stakeholders.
KPIs (tbc):
Timeline:
2030
Contacts:
This challenge aims at creating a training hub for functional restoration of tropical marine
ecosystems to deliver scalable impact from restoration activity in Indonesia and Timor-
Leste, knowledge and best practices hub for the global restoration movement. The lessons
learned, such as from workshops and learning exchanges will enhance restoration projects
not only in the Coral Triangle but globally by sharing these through the UN Decade’s digital
hub, and ensure practitioners take a scientifically rigorous approach to their projects that
deliver on restoration of ecosystem function and the services provided to coastal
communities.
The first achievement is to have a fully functional coral reef restoration training hub
established in Sanur, Bali, Indonesia, to be followed by training dedicated members of from
coastal communities from Nusa Penida, Banda Islands, and Timor-Leste to engage in
workshops and gain significant proficiency in implementing successful coral reef restoration
projects. Lessons learned from these coral restoration workshop will guide further
workshops and online modules for both mangrove and seagrass ecosystems. The location
in Sanur, Bali, gives our team access to important seagrass and mangroves habitats in both
Sanur and Nusa Lembongan.
Indonesia is chosen on purpose. The country has the most coral reef restoration projects in
the world, yet despite the good intentions of the projects, they often result in failure because
of poor design and implementation. Many projects do not have clear goals or objectives,
lack scientific rigour, and do not have foresight to maintain and/or monitor success after
their implementation. The Coral Triangle Center, the lead of this challenge, with their
partners Mars Sustainable Solutions, and the Nusa Dua Reef Foundation, founded
Indonesia’s first Coral Reef Restoration Task Force (CRRTF), which aims to help provide a
capacity building framework for coral restoration projects that restore the ecological
function of coral reefs in Indonesia and the Coral Triangle at meaningful geographical
scales. The training hub in Bali helps in ecological assessments identifying suitable sites for
scaled up restoration and train groups working in ecosystem restoration within Indonesia
and beyond how to create long lasting tropical marine ecosystem restoration projects that
deliver in returning coral reefs, mangroves, and seagrass beds to a state that provides
ecosystem services towards the marine lie and human communities that depend on them.
Tropical marine ecosystem restoration workshops held at the training hub would be
conducted by the existing coral reef restoration task force and other experts in the field of
Mangroves and Seagrass beds. The training outcomes of the workshops will be as follows:
KPIs:
Timeline:
2023:
● Find appropriate sights in Indonesia (preferably Bali) to be a training hub in the Coral
Triangle. This involves ecosystem assessments, stakeholder consultations, sourcing
of materials etc.
● Develop work plan including amplifying channels, coordination with UN decade Task
Forces and Advisory Board, and establish coral restoration chapter on the Digital Hub
2024:
● Launch training hub, which provides training to Marine Protected Area staff from
Nusa Penida (Bali), Banda Islands (Maluku province), and Atauro Island (Timor-
Leste) for coral reef restoration such as the Mars Assisted Reef Restoration System
(MARRS) method, which entails using sand coated reef stars in unconsolidated
rubble habitats where ecosystem function has not been able to recover from
previous disturbances. Other methods such as fish domes, and rubble stabilization
structure will be considered where applicable.
2025:
2026:
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2027-2028:
Contacts:
Get involved in citizen science projects, beach clean ups and other ● Individuals and
community initiatives to protect oceans, lakes and rivers. communities
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This challenge aims to achieve a target of Land Degradation Neutrality by 2030, ensuring
that 30% land is under restoration by 2030 and 50% reduction in land degradation by 2040.
These targets are based on the commitments given by the Members of the UN Convention
to Combat Desertification, the new Target (2) in the Kunming-Montreal Biodiversity
Framework (30% land under restoration by 2030) and the G20 Global Initiative on Reducing
Land Restoration and Enhancing Conservation of Terrestrial Habitats (50% reduction in
degraded land by 2040).
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KPIs:
● 30 percent areas under effective restoration by 2030
● Land Degradation Neutrality Achieved by 2030
● Curriculum on land-based ecosystem restoration implemented in 1000 universities
● A five-year plan to reach at least 10000 participants in 100 countries with training
programs on ecosystem restoration
● Develop a plan to build capacity for at least 10,000 Ecopreneurs around the world
Timeline:
2023:
● Invite expression of interest from other partners of Decade for Ecosystem
Restoration to be part of the Restoration Challenge.
● Engage with other restoration challenges, especially Finance, Business, Education,
Cities, Communities, and Youth so as to leverage each other’s work.
● Organize in personal partner meeting in Bonn to think strategically about the
possibilities and collaboratively develop a work plan.
● Compile restoration commitments from all countries under various international
conventions (UNCCD, UNCBD, and UNFCCC) and other global initiatives (Bonn
Challenge, AFR100, Middle East Green Initiative).
● Organise an event for Parliamentarians from around the world to sensitize them
about the legal and policy developments in the domain of land restoration.
● Provide media fellowships to journalists around the world to write stories, including
video blogs, on restoration and have them published around the world
● Working with the Education challenge team, to develop a concept to reach 1000
universities with a curriculum on land-based ecosystem restoration
● Work with the Center of Excellence in Sustainable Land Management (India), to
develop a five-year plan to reach at least 10000 participants in 100 countries with
training programs on ecosystem restoration
● Prepare specific approaches for restoration of abandoned mines and quarries
● Working with World Economic Forum or similar partners, develop a plan to build
capacity for at least 10,000 Ecopreneurs around the world and implement the plan
2024:
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2025
● Working with the Global Mechanism of the UNCCD and their project preparation
partners, identify key Transformative Projects on restoration which can be promoted
for resource mobilization.
● Working with the group on Finance, identify the key financing opportunities for large-
scale restoration projects on land
● Train at least 1000 ecopreneurs on land restoration including project management,
technology, and marketing
● Support implementation of large scale projects such as the Great Green Wall, Middle
East Green Initiative
● Introduce new technologies such as Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and Drones for
the restoration
● Work with major mining companies to initiate large scale mine site restoration
projects
● Work with small-scale quarries to increase quarry restoration after the completion of
productive lives
● Compile best practices and promote them through an information-sharing hub
● Review progress made in countries on land restoration based on their publicly
available writing
Partners invited among others: UNEP, FAO, CBD, WEF, UNFCC, IUCN, WEF, PBL, ITU, Google,
Universities, Training Institutions, Bezos Foundation, National Governments, and all
interested partners
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Contacts:
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Young people have enormous potential and play a crucial role in preserving biodiversity,
conserving forests, and restoring ecosystems. In addition to having a desire and capacity to
contribute with their own experiences to the outcomes of restoration. To achieve the goals
of the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration and a global #GenerationRestoration requires
growth of the ecosystem restoration sector, in which Youth can play an important role.
12.1 Job-train and mentor over 600 youths as restoration practitioners by 2030
This challenge is aimed at developing an intensive study curriculum for job training utilizing
project-based-learning and hands-on skill development to empower youth to engage in
nature-based employment.
Through collaboration with 3-5 partners in each region, job training, business management
and agricultural skills will be imparted to local youth in order to close the skills gap between
community needs and the skill set of unemployed persons. Individual partners will be able to
catalyze existing programming using the expertise provided by the Challenge Team, while
most funding to pay youth participants will go from local economic activities or through
funding from the National Youth Ministry.
Stakeholders include
● Program Hosts: National Youth corps/Youth Ministries, social enterprises,
universities or technical institutes, conservation organizations, start-up incubators.
● Local Youth: refugees/migrants,
● Peoples of color, indigenous people, frontline community members, eco-preneurs,
disabled persons, recent graduates, etc.
● Community Partners: agricultural or food businesses, land managers, food banks,
plant nurseries, ecologists, etc.
During the training, students would develop a Project Plan and/or Business model for their
ecopreneurship venture or community service contribution, that could support Green Jobs
and meet local needs. Project Planning would include:
● Developing their Theory of Change, Value-Add Proposition and/or a mission and
vision statement
● Setting SMART Goals for the short, medium and long term
● Creating a Transformational Change Chart and mapping the power players in their
community
● Writing an Elevator Pitch and drafting a grant proposal, including budgeting for
financial and other resource needs.
● Submitting a Gantt chart or timeline to accomplish their restoration goals.
Program Activities may also include participating in Online and/or In-person modules for
skill development, project-based Internships/apprenticeship for on-the-job learning, policy
advocacy workshop & consultations, the formation of a LinkedIn alumni group, Green Jobs
board & resume review services, mentorship, and case studies of sustainable business
models.
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Youth and youth organisations also have an important role to play in political activities as
the local, national and international level. Support for Challenge participants and other youth
to attend high level events may be a part of the implementation, marketing and/or
fundraising components of the challenge. Youth organisations can also become engaged in
restoration work through grant-making. On-ground consultations are further encouraged to
continue the dialogue between the Task Force and youth restoration practitioners.
This program will partner with existing similar programs, such as through the UNEP Nature
Positive University Alliance, Restoration Academy & ILO’s Green Jobs Programme. While
these programs each address one element of the Challenge’s goals, the Task Force aims to
close the gaps between these entities, help to scale up their work, and include non-
traditional students, refugees/climate migrants, Indigenous youth, etc.
Support will be needed in the following ways: in-kind contributions, direct funding/matches,
and/or job placement for the implementation of the Challenge. Please see the budget below
which separated out the funds required for minimal operating levels as well as additional
desired funding to be able to optimize the program. Further In-kind contributions and
partnerships will also be needed for the success of this challenge. Partner entities can offer
support with curriculum development, job placement, as well as serve as host sites for in-
person training. Interested parties may communicate to un-decade-ytf@unmgcy.org their
interest.
Donors will further be invited to sign up to be part of the UN Decade Partnership Network
and benefit from the network opportunities, if desired, as well as benefit from clear visibility
at global and regional level as part of the UN Decade’s communication and advocacy work
through direct affiliation to the Youth Challenge.
This challenge will be led by the UN Decade Youth Task Force and therefore Youth itself. The
required a minimum of funds is 495,000 USD (Project funding, publication, administration)
and a desired additional 923,000 USD (Project and mentor stipends, Workshops, Printing,
Shipping, and Contingency costs).
● SDG 1 - No Poverty
● SDG 2 - Zero Hunger
● SDG 8 - Decent Work & Economic Growth
● SDG 13 - Climate Action
● SDG 14 - Life Below Water
● SDG 15 - Life on Land
● SDG 17 - Partnership for the goals
KPIs:
● 600 program participants over the 7 years of the program.
○ Annual Workshops (in-person or online, pending resource availability &
health/safety precautions)
○ Micro-grants offered to 10% of graduates to implement their community
restoration projects or support their social enterprise.
● 60% of graduates employed within 1 year of program completion
○ # of jobs facilitated for young people in the restoration field.
Timeline:
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2023:
● Identifying co-leading entities and curriculum development
2024:
● LAC Regional launch
2025:
● Africa Regional launch
2026:
● Asia/Pacific Regional launch
2027:
● MENA & Western Asia Regional launch
2028:
● SIDS Regional launch
2029:
● Europe, Oceania & N.America Regional launch
Major Group for Children & Youth, SER, Plant For the Planet, SOS Mata Atlantica
Contacts:
12.2 Restore 10,000 schoolyards and reach 100 Million posts with
#GenerationRestoration
Based on the principle of intergenerational equity: "as members of the present generation,
we hold the earth in full trust for future generations." Today’s youths are the future
generation and are therefore most impacted by our current trajectory in the global
environmental crisis. UNEP has just released guidelines and principles highlighting the
importance of protecting the environment for future generations and ensuring that children
have access to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment, in line with the Paris
Agreement and the triple planetary challenges of climate change, biodiversity loss, and
pollution & waste.
The restoration challenge YOUTH focus on the young champions and youth led restoration
initiatives and youth organizations, participate in restoration activities, decision-making and
propel the #GenerationRestoration movement. The Challenge YOUTH in this Action Plan is
the invitation for concrete joint action forces to take leadership in achieving the objectives
set by the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration by 2030. The required knowledge and tools
we need to halt degradation and restore ecosystems are already in place, except for our
willingness for a long-term commitment. The APSCC’s youth-centered initiative titled
“International Climate Change Adaptation & Resilience Program (ICCARP)” with several
Nature-Positive programs will catalyze a global willingness that complements the 10-year
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Having around 1.2 billion young people aged 15 to 24 years, accounting for 16% of the global
population, YOUTH and YOUNG PEOPLE have a crucial role to play, in driving action across
all pillars of this overall plan in the following pathways:
2023-2030
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Contacts:
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Do you work on ecosystem restoration on the ground or know someone who does? Join the
UN Decade as a Restoration Initiative.
Organisations are invited to apply as official partner of the UN Decade with long-term
commitments. To apply as partner, consult the partner framework and write to
restorationdecade@un.org
8
A survey by UNEP found that 68 per cent of respondents said their interest in restoration is primarily personal.
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3.2. Financing
To achieve the vision of the UN Decade requires catalysing private and public investments in
ecosystem restoration. Governments around the world have already committed to restoring a total of
nearly 1 billion hectares of degraded land by 2030 (Sewell, van der Esch and Löwenhardt, 2020).
However, the implementation of these commitments is lagging, partly due to a major funding gap
(Ding et al., 2017). Financing restoration actions under the UN Decade will require policies and
financial mechanisms to overcome existing financial barriers. The Restoration Challenge for Finance
aims to mobilise investments in restoration over the coming decade. There are a range of potential
sources of finance from the private sector - sustainable supply chains, biodiversity offsets, equity
impact investing, payment for ecosystem services, voluntary carbon markets, REDD+ and philanthropy
(UNEP, 2021c). Meanwhile, public finance can work for restoration through leveraging carbon pricing,
climate finance and redirecting incentives towards restoration, among others (Ding et al., 2017).
Within the UN Decade governance structure, the Multi-Partner Trust Fund (MPTF) acts as the catalytic
financial mechanism serving the purpose to kick start and facilitate actions supporting World
Restoration Flagships, while the Finance Task Force provides expert guidance to support and
incentivise ecosystem restoration and will work with Challenge leads. The MPTF was established in
2021 by FAO and UNEP. Importantly, the Fund is not designed to be a funding facility that finances all
activities needed to implement the full strategy of the Decade; it will rather encourage and support
strategic interventions, which contribute to an informed and coordinated movement for turning the
tide of ecosystem degradation. It seeks to provide constructive avenues for actions and routes to
overcome barriers.
Larger restoration programmes around the world are funded through national governments,
development banks, impact investors, the European Union, the Global Environment Facility and the
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Green Climate Fund. Major initiatives are implemented and funded by UN Decade partners, like the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), the World Resources Institute, the Global
Landscapes Forum, the World Wide Fund for Nature, 1t.org and other global and national civil society
organisations. These organisations mobilise support for restoration, fund programmes to prevent,
halt and reverse degradation of ecosystems, and help remove barriers for restoration. As such, these
organisations and their programmes are critical to bringing restoration initiatives to scale. Domestic
funding is also increasingly mobilised for restoration such as the watershed restoration programme
to secure drinking water for Sao Paulo City in Brazil.
The World Bank chairs the Finance Task Force, which has the following functions and will play a key
role in this endeavour:
1) provide guidance to reorient subsidies towards ecosystem restoration in an appropriate manner;
2) counter economic forces and vested interests that result in ecosystem degradation; and,
3) incentivise public and corporate investors to co-invest in ecosystem restoration, including in areas
where the benefits from restoration are predominantly public goods.
9
Find more information on the Monitoring Task Force here: https://www.fao.org/3/cb0424en/cb0424en.pdf
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data reporting systems within relevant international commitments, conventions and plans, such as
the post-2020 global biodiversity framework and the Global Forest Resource Assessment (FRA). The
Monitoring Task Force has drafted a first global framework for monitoring and reporting progress in
relation to the UN Decade 10, and a set of headline indicators (Figure 3). The FERM registry will be used
to report on global restoration progress as part of the UN Decade and to the CBD post-2020 global
biodiversity framework Target 2. It intends to support ecosystem monitoring by all actors, people,
communities and countries. The specific objectives of the Monitoring Task Force are to:
a) Develop and propose a framework (including indicators, available tools/databases,
reporting lines and timelines) for operational monitoring and for reporting the progress and
achievements on both biophysical and socio-economic benefits of restoration which occur
throughout the duration of UN Decade, and advise stakeholders as necessary.
b) Serve as focal point for providing technical guidance and assistance on restoration
monitoring for UN Decade flagships.
c) Foster collaboration between conventions, frameworks, and emerging monitoring
initiatives, which monitor and report elements of restoration in various ecosystems and seek
synergies and avoid duplication of effort.
d) Identify key gaps and areas of critical importance to restoration monitoring which require
further research and development and targeted investment to ensure all ecosystems can be
adequately monitored through the decade.
Source: FAO and UNEP. 2022. Global indicators for monitoring ecosystem restoration – A contribution to the UN
Decade on Ecosystem Restoration. Rome, FAO. https://doi.org/10.4060/cb9982en
10
FAO and UNEP, 2022. Global indicators for monitoring ecosystem restoration – A contribution to the UN Decade on
Ecosystem Restoration. Rome, FAO: https://www.fao.org/documents/card/en/c/cb9982en
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3.5. Science
The IUCN-led Science Task Force provides an authoritative scientific reference for the UN Decade. It
will produce, collate and convey concise information and concepts of terrestrial, freshwater and
marine ecosystem restoration based on rigorous evidence. The Task Force aims to address pertinent
scientific questions that might arise during the implementation of the UN Decade and provide
guidance to all partners.
3.6. Youth
The involvement of youth in the UN Decade and #GenerationRestoration movement is critically
important, not only for the sustainability of restoration initiatives beyond 2030 but also for the
promotion of intergenerational equity and empowerment of young people. During the UN Decade, the
Major Group for Children and Youth through the Children and Youth Organisation accredited to UNEP
and SDG 2 Working Group will facilitate the engagement of youth advocates, youth-led restoration
initiatives, and a wide range of formal and informal youth groups.
Young people have been engaged in the processes of the UN Decade since its inception. Among other
things, this has entailed hosting several on-ground and virtual consultations on the engagement of
young people in the UN Decade and the inaugural #GenerationRestoration Youth Assembly alongside
the public launch of the Decade in 2021. There have been ongoing internal consultations, working
group meetings and mobilisation that garner and advance the meaningful engagement of young
people across the pillars of policy advocacy, knowledge, action and capacity building.
The UN Decade Youth Task Force and the Youth Focus Group serve as the mandated and self-
organised youth mechanism that facilitates young people and is part of the UN Decade governance.
The Youth Focus Group, universally structured, allows young people across several constituencies,
movements and young individuals to engage with the UN Decade. Young people and youth
organisations will continue to play a crucial role in driving action for the UN Decade and engaging
across all pillars and activities of this Action Plan.
3.7. Communication
Communication is central to the UN Decade, to mobilise society, increase awareness of the benefits
of restoration and the costs of degradation and shift behaviours to scale up restoration around the
world.
The UN Decade’s Digital Hub connects the restoration community. It serves as the central location to
register actions, showcase activities, and connect with other participants. The Digital Hub aims to be
the largest single database of ecosystem restoration initiatives, a platform uniquely focused on the
grassroots perspectives and needs of restoration implementers, and lastly, a focal point on the web
dedicated to uniting trusted restoration resources. The Digital Hub allows the upscaling and
replication of existing restoration projects. Through this digital site, people can access different
events, conferences, workshops, training, good practices, monitoring and data platforms, and support
to on-the-ground initiatives and activities through a growing network of connectors, partners, funders,
and voices.
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3.9 Timeline
202 202 202 202 202 202 202 202 202 203
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration
Multi-Partner Trust
Fund 5-year
programme
Secretary General's
report, UN General
Assembly
Global capacity
needs assessment
CBD COP
UNFCCC COP
UNCCD COP
UN Environmental
Assembly
UN General
Assembly
Conventions on
Migratory Species
UN Ocean
Conference
UN Forum on
Forests
UN Food Systems
Summit
IPCC Plenary
Sessions
IPBES Plenary
Sessions
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● Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework Target 10: “Ensure that areas under
agriculture, aquaculture, fisheries and forestry are managed sustainably, in particular through
the sustainable use of biodiversity, including through a substantial increase of the application
of biodiversity friendly practices, such as sustainable intensification, agroecological and other
innovative approaches contributing to the resilience and long-term efficiency and productivity
of these production systems and to food security, conserving and restoring biodiversity and
maintaining nature’s contributions to people, including ecosystem functions and services.”
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● Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework Target 12: “Significantly increase the area
and quality and connectivity of, access to, and benefits from green and blue spaces in urban
and densely populated areas sustainably, by mainstreaming the conservation and sustainable
use of biodiversity, and ensure biodiversity-inclusive urban planning, enhancing native
biodiversity, ecological connectivity and integrity, and improving human health and well-being
and connection to nature and contributing to inclusive and sustainable urbanisation and the
provision of ecosystem functions and services.”
● Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework Target 14: “Ensure the full integration of
biodiversity and its multiple values into policies, regulations, planning and development
processes, poverty eradication strategies, strategic environmental assessments,
environmental impact assessments and, as appropriate, national accounting, within and
across all levels of government and across all sectors, in particular those with significant
impacts on biodiversity, progressively aligning all relevant public and private activities, fiscal
and financial flows with the goals and targets of this framework.”
● Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework Target 21: “Ensure that the best available
data, information and knowledge, are accessible to decision makers, practitioners and the
public to guide effective and equitable governance, integrated and participatory management
of biodiversity, and to strengthen communication, awareness-raising, education, monitoring,
research and knowledge management and, also in this context, traditional knowledge,
innovations, practices and technologies of indigenous peoples and local communities should
only be accessed with their free, prior and informedconsent20, in accordance with national
legislation.”
● Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework Target 22: “Ensure the full, equitable,
inclusive, effective and gender-responsive representation and participation in decision-
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making, and access to justice and information related to biodiversity by indigenous peoples
and local communities, respecting their cultures and their rights over lands, territories,
resources, and traditional knowledge, as well as by women and girls, children and youth, and
persons with disabilities and ensure the full protection of environmental human rights
defenders.”
● SDG#1 (No poverty): “to end poverty in all its forms everywhere”.
● SDG #2 (Zero Hunger): to “end hunger, achieve food security and improve nutrition and
promote sustainable agriculture”.
● SDG#3 (Good Health and Wellbeing): to “ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at
all ages”.
● SDG#4 (Quality Education): to “ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote
lifelong learning opportunities for all”.
● SDG#5 (Gender Equity): to “achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls”.
● SDG #6 (Clear water and sanitation): to “ensure access to water and sanitation for all”.
● SDG#7 (Affordable and clean energy): to “ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and
modern energy for all”.
● SDG #8 (Decent work and economic growth): to “promote sustained, inclusive and
sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all
● SDG#11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities): to “make cities inclusive, safe, resilient and
sustainable”.
● SDG#13 (Climate Action): to “take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts”.
● SDG#14 (Life below Water): to “conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine
resources for sustainable development”.
● SDG #15 (Life on land): to “protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial
ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land
degradation and halt biodiversity loss”.
● SDG #16 (Peace, justice and strong institutions): to “promote just, peaceful and inclusive
societies”.
● SDG #17 (Partnership for the goals): to “strengthen the means of implementation and
revitalise the Global Partnership for Sustainable Development”.
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC): NDCs, NAPs and Paris
Agreements
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