In 2015, the UN adopted 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), aiming to “protect the planet from degradation…so that it can support the needs of the present and future generations.” Through the SDGs, the UN recognises that conservation directly supports human health and wellbeing by providing goods like water and fibre, and global public goods like habitat for species and mitigation of climate change. Although trade-offs can indeed arise between conservation and economic development, the Rockefeller Foundation–Lancet Commission on planetary health states unequivocally that “the environment has been the foundation of human flourishing,” suggesting that if environmental degradation persists then ongoing improvements in human health are likely to be reversed.
Can nature deliver on the sustainable development goals?
Abstract
Publication Type
Journal Article
Date
Journal
The Lancet. Planetary health
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Brendan Fisher
Taylor Ricketts
Article published in Environmental Research Letters
Article published in Nature Communications