The current fragmented approaches to addressing crises like biodiversity loss and climate change are inefficient and often counterproductive, hindering overall progress.
In Senegal, removing invasive aquatic plants not only reduced schistosomiasis infection rates by 32 percent, but also provided a sustainable cattle feed alternative, boosting food production.
A landmark assessment encourages a holistic approach to solving interlinked issues of climate change, biodiversity loss, agriculture, and health, presenting numerous potential integrated solutions.
The assessment by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform highlights that interconnections between climate, health, and biodiversity should guide the development of effective, unified solutions.
Collection
[
|
...
]