Nature-based climate solutions (NbCS) — strategies that harness the power of nature to boost natural ecosystems, provide habitat for wildlife, sequester carbon from the atmosphere and keep it stored in soils and plants — are essential to meeting Canada’s climate and biodiversity targets. A central tenet of NbCS is “protect what you have” — and Canada, compared to other nations, has a lot. One third of the planet’s remaining intact ecosystems are found here, nestled between three oceans and within Indigenous territories, including large swaths in the north.
As part of an international commitment — the High Ambition Coalition for Nature and People — Canada has set an ambitious goal, referred to as 30×30, to protect 30 per cent of its land and freshwater, as well as its oceans, by 2030. While quantitative targets are critical for measuring progress, the qualitative aspects of protected and conserved area establishment and management are equally important.
What’s lacking now in many conservation efforts is the fact that … it doesn’t represent the spirit of the animals, the spirit of the plants and all the interconnectedness that’s celebrated by Indigenous people and their relationships with place.
—Steven Nitah, Łutsël K’é Dene First Nation
To date, the establishment of protected areas have resulted in islands of conservation, at times without consideration for connectivity, ecological representation, the potential to store carbon, and the impact on the livelihood and disruption of Indigenous people. A plan for longstanding maintenance and stewardship of these lands — the burden of which disproportionately lands on Indigenous communities — has also often been overlooked.
A new approach is urgently needed if we are going to advance reconciliation and achieve our climate and biodiversity goals — one that protects the right areas, for the right reasons, in the right way.