dumboiu
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2000
- Messages
- 2,203
BANGKOK (Nov. 2) - The world's list of endangered species is growing at an alarming and unprecedented rate as governments pay less and less attention to green issues, a major global environmental body said on Tuesday.
The World Conservation Union, which also goes under the acronym IUCN, said it would release a "red list" of more than 12,000 threatened species at the World Conservation Congress in Thailand, which starts on November 17.
"The scale and pace of extinction is higher now than ever before. Research indicates that the rate could even be up to 1,000 times higher than we would naturally expect," IUCN Director General Achim Steiner told a news conference.
With up to 30 per cent of the world's species facing extinction in the next 50 years, the IUCN said it would also release a damning report on what it says is shrinking government investment in conservation.
Up to 3,500 environmentalists, scientists, businessmen and government officials are expected to attend the week-long conference, which is being billed as the largest conservation meeting ever.
Corporate heavyweights, including oil giants Shell and BP and world number one car maker General Motors, are expected to show up, pushing the environmental performance of big business into the spotlight.
Steiner said he expected sparks to fly at the conference, which comes round every four years, as green groups and business leaders clash over the best ways to manage the environment.
"The vast majority of companies are ignoring the environment and they are far from acknowledging the problems that we are faced with," he said.
"The oil, gas, mining and agricultural sectors in particular need to become far more proactive in reversing environment degradation."
The World Conservation Union, which also goes under the acronym IUCN, said it would release a "red list" of more than 12,000 threatened species at the World Conservation Congress in Thailand, which starts on November 17.
"The scale and pace of extinction is higher now than ever before. Research indicates that the rate could even be up to 1,000 times higher than we would naturally expect," IUCN Director General Achim Steiner told a news conference.
With up to 30 per cent of the world's species facing extinction in the next 50 years, the IUCN said it would also release a damning report on what it says is shrinking government investment in conservation.
Up to 3,500 environmentalists, scientists, businessmen and government officials are expected to attend the week-long conference, which is being billed as the largest conservation meeting ever.
Corporate heavyweights, including oil giants Shell and BP and world number one car maker General Motors, are expected to show up, pushing the environmental performance of big business into the spotlight.
Steiner said he expected sparks to fly at the conference, which comes round every four years, as green groups and business leaders clash over the best ways to manage the environment.
"The vast majority of companies are ignoring the environment and they are far from acknowledging the problems that we are faced with," he said.
"The oil, gas, mining and agricultural sectors in particular need to become far more proactive in reversing environment degradation."



