Caption:
Wanfenglin
Scenic
Area,
Xingyi
City,
Guizhou
Province
This
forum
will
focus
closely
on
the
core
issue
of
“Mountain
Biodiversity
and
Our
Life”,
and
builds
a
“Science—Policy—Public”
dialogue
platform.
Through
three
major
segments
of
keynote
speeches,
technical
discussions,
and
expert
dialogues,
we
will
delve
into
the
collaborative
path
between
mountain
eco-conservation
and
sustainable
development.
The
agenda
covers
key
topics
such
as
the
current
status
of
global
mountain
biodiversity,
conservation
practices
in
southwestern
China
and
the
Himalayan
region,
and
the
relationship
between
biodiversity,
climate,
and
development.
Caption:
Morning
Scenery
of
Jiabang
Terraced
Fields
in
Congjiang
County,
Guizhou
Province
The
forum
has
a
scale
of
about
80
people
and
gathers
authoritative
voices
in
the
field
of
global
mountain
conservation.
Special
guests
include
think
tanks
from
ICIMOD,
practitioners
of
eco-conservation
in
South
Asia,
scientists
from
top
Chinese
research
institutes,
and
frontline
eco-guardians
in
Guizhou
province.
The
forum
is
expected
to
condense
scientific
consensus
and
action
plans,
promote
the
formation
of
an
eco-conservation
cooperation
mechanism
between
Southwest
China
and
the
Himalayan
region,
advocate
public
participation
in
ecological
protection,
and
enhance
public
ecological
awareness.
According to Chen Huai, a member of the 14th CPPCC National Committee and a botany doctor, Guizhou is the only province in China that has no plain to support. 92.5% of the area is mountainous and hilly, which is an important eco-barrier in the upper reaches of the Yangtze River and the Pearl River. This place has world natural heritage sites such as Libo Karst and Shibing Yuntai Mountain, as well as national nature reserves such as Fanjing Mountain and Maolan. Its biodiversity richness ranks fourth in China.
The forum will showcase Guizhou’s innovative experiences in grassland and wetland restoration, Maolan Nature Reserve management, and desertification control, providing a “Guizhou Example” for global mountain eco-treatment From the construction of eco-corridor in the Giant Panda National Park to community participatory conservation in Guizhou, China’s experience has become an important reference for global biodiversity conservation. This forum will promote the deep integration of Chinese wisdom with international practice, and help achieve the United Nations’ 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 13 Climate Action, SDG 15 Land Ecology).
Hashtag: #MountainBiodiversityandOurLife
The issuer is solely responsible for the content of this announcement.
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