The Undersecretary of Environment, Ana Lamas, questioned “trade restrictions under the pretext of protecting forest ecosystems.”
After her dissonant participation in the World Summit on Biodiversity, COP16, the Undersecretary of Environment, Ana Lamasonce again defended the Government’s position on climate change this Thursday. “It is not fair that in this context trade restrictions are imposed under the pretext of protecting forest ecosystems.” in emerging countries,” said the official.
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Slats presented last Wednesday the national biodiversity strategy in the COP16 which takes place in Cali, Colombia. In contrast to the consensus in favor of controlling environmental damage, Lamas questioned these proposals: “Climate management is a market issue and the president (Javier Milei) understands it well.”


Aligned with the president’s speech at the UN, Lamas criticized the 2030 Agenda promoted by the international organization. “It has objectives that no one can question but the goals that were set have a lot of bureaucracy and the president does not agree and runs away from that. Argentina is not going to carry out an exchange by nature because it generates more inflation”he added.
COP16: the UN asked countries to maximize efforts to lower global temperatures
During COP16, the UN He insisted on achieving one of the objectives he had already set in climate matters. This would imply improvements in the climate and a reduction in ecological damage.
For this reason, while a new summit of the COP16 in Colombiathe organization severely demanded that participating countries intend to achieve that goal.
Without a “global climate mobilization, the goal of limit global warming to 1.5°C will soon die,” warned this Thursday the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), in the midst of the climate summit.
“We need global mobilization on a scale and pace never seen before, a mobilization that starts now. Otherwise, the 1.5°C goal will soon die,” he declared. Inger Andersenexecutive director of UNEP.
Source: Ambito

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