²ÝÁñÊÓƵ

Press Release

BIOLAC at the Climate and SDG Synergy Conference: More Biology for a Fundamentally Biological Issue

The 1.5¡ã goal is still within reach but will need vital synergies and political commitment with a sense of urgency. Biotechnology has answers.

Date Published
27 Sep 2024

²ÝÁñÊÓƵ-BIOLAC participated at the ," which was co-convened by UNDESA and UNFCCC and hosted by the  Government of Brazil.

This high-level meeting, which sought to turn the ongoing discourse on climate change into results, brought forward two keywords to concentrate on: Urgency and synergies.

, we are already at 1.1 degrees of warming above pre-industrial levels, with current projections demonstrating increased global warming of 3.2 degrees by 2100, which will result in devastating impacts on the planet and human systems. However, the SDGs and the 1.5-degree limit are still within reach if they are addressed together, and we must act now.

The way forward: Synergies. Coordinated action and multi-stakeholder partnerships are not just key, they are essential to advancing. While this is not a new demand, the conference concentrated on solutions for the observed obstacles, namely, what prevents political commitment to these synergies, for example, bridging financial divides, unequitable transitions and slow adoption of bioeconomies. The need for collective efforts is paramount.

 

Gustavo Fermin at the Bioeconomy roundtable.

 

Dr. Gustavo Fermin, ²ÝÁñÊÓƵ-BIOLAC's Programme Head, participated in the Nature Regeneration and Bioeconomy round table, where he advocated for three necessary elements that can potentiate Biotechnology as a source of technical solutions for a fundamental aspect discussed during the conference: sectorial adaptation, which is the capacity of economic and public sectors to respond to climate threats and adapt to new realities.

These three elements are: 


1) Free and equitable access to relevant information, particularly scientific output. 
2) Easier access to genetic resources for research.
3) An openness to "Frugal innovation," as many solutions from these genetic resources don't always need high technological investments.

In short, Dr. Fermin advocated for in the search for climate stability, in line with the conference's demand for incorporating every stakeholder's voice, particularly those more affected by climate change, as a key to moving forward.

Finally, the conference also identified two critical points of attention: That there is sufficient evidence for the co-benefits of climate synergies being far more significant than the tradeoffs for the stakeholders and that a transition to a low-carbon economy must have a financial aid strategy for people who depend on jobs related to high carbon intensity, to get them to incorporate into the expected synergistic action. 

Bioeconomy Roundtable
Elisabetta Recine, President, Brazil National Council on Food and Nutrition Security (CONSEA)

Related content

News

Next Course: ¡°Tools for the preclinical study of new bioactive molecules from a One Health perspective¡±, July 2025

Apply for a scholarship to this course coordinated by Drs. Gloria L¨®pez, Andrea Medeiros, and Beatriz Mungu¨ªa at Institut Pasteur, Montevideo, Uruguay

12 Mar 2025

News

Next Course: ¡°Unveiling Prokaryotic Traits Through Whole Genome Sequencing Data Analysis¡±, August 2025

Apply for a scholarship to participate in the course coordinated by Dr. Julian Rafael Dib at Planta Piloto PROIMI-CONICET in Tucum¨¢n, Argentina

12 Mar 2025

News

Next Conference: ¡°Molecular Biosystems Conference on Eukaryotic Gene Regulation & Functional Genomics¡±, September 2025

Apply for a participation grant for the conference coordinated by Dr. Luis Larrondo in Puerto Varas, Chile

10 Mar 2025

News

Next Course: ¡°Metabolomics in Food Science: From Food Resources to Industrial Processing and Food Intake¡±, July 2025

Apply for a scholarship to participate in the course coordinated by Dr. M¨®nica Cala at Universidad de los Andes, Caribbean Campus, Cartagena, Colombia

06 Mar 2025