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The new draft of the UN's biodiversity framework aims to have at least 20 per cent of degraded freshwater, marine and terrestrial ecosystems under restoration by 2030. Image: Jani Sipilä/Greenpeace.
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Although the biodiversity crisis is intimately linked to the climate one, the financing to address it is woefully inadequate. With a new global biodiversity plan now in the works, the world has an opportunity – and a duty – to start making up for lost time...we at The Nature Conservancy...crunched the numbers to see what it would cost to preserve biodiversity...

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