
Understanding sound flanking: Fire alarm speaker cable conduits in multi-family buildings
by Neil Vyas
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At the end of 2022, COP15 – the 15th conference of the parties for the Convention on Biological Biodiversity - continued its two-week negotiation for the protection and loss of biodiversity. The positive momentum during negotiations kept going, and finally, after a wait until 3:30am, the once-in-a-decade opportunity to secure the post 2020 Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) was accepted. This was met with the great delight and applause from the hundreds of people who had stayed up all night waiting for the announcement, including SLR’s Ida Bailey. She shares her thoughts and key takeaways on the outcome below.
The Global Biodiversity Framework outlines 23 ambitious targets to reverse biodiversity loss by the end of the decade, including goals such as:
Many of these targets will result in rapid in change for businesses, in particular target 15. Fortunately, at COP15, leaders in the business and finance communities showed clear recognition of their dependencies and impacts on nature, and the business and investment risks associated with these. Leaders were vocal in their support for ambitious targets, and requirements for businesses to report on their impacts and dependencies on nature.
Meeting these targets is critical to global, social, and financial wellbeing, and for many of them we have only seven years before the deadline. It is time to act, and to implement actions as swiftly as is practical. With no time to waste, perfecting approaches and strategies may not be the goal, but instead we can collaborate closely to align approaches and standards, and to learn from each other.
Fundamentally, we need to get the planet back within the planetary boundary for biodiversity. It will take time for policies and guidance to be produced and aligned in support of this, and biodiversity restoration and enhancement will take much longer. The message is: we only have seven years until 2030, let’s get started!
by Neil Vyas