Less than a hundred days until the IUCN Conservation Congress
The next IUCN Conservation Congress, the world’s largest environmental decision-making forum, will take place in less than a 100 days.
Originally scheduled in June 2020, the IUCN World Conservation Congress will take place from 3rd to 11th September 2021 in Marseille, France.
Offering both in-person and virtual participation, the event is organised into four parts:
- The Forum (4-7 September); a “marketplace” for innovation, research and policy in the area of conservation.
- IUCN Members Assembly (8-10 September); the world’s largest democratic environmental decision-making platform.
- The Exhibition (4-9 September); where IUCN members, businesses, partners and academia host stands and events to showcase their research and innovations.
- Espaces Generations Nature (4-11 September); engaging the general public in conservation.
Visit the following link to access the full programme.
The IUCN Congress is a key milestone for nature conservation
The world is increasingly recognising the inextricable link between biodiversity conservation and human and economic wellbeing, a connection made all the more visible by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The IUCN World Conservation Congress will therefore be a key milestone for nature conservation and the development of a new global framework for biodiversity.
The IUCN Congress will “inform new global targets and action towards a sustainable, healthy future for people and nature” prior to pivotal UN conferences on biodiversity and climate change, scheduled respectively in October and November.
About the IUCN World Conservation Congress
Held every four years, the IUCN World Conservation Congress is an event which brings together the global nature conservation community to determine the most pressing issues in terms of nature conservation. The congress allows its 1400 members to set the global conservation agenda for the next four years.
As a reminder, the IUCN is an international organisation that operates in the field of nature conservation. It is involved in data gathering and analysis and is best known for compiling and publishing the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, which assesses the conservation status of species worldwide.