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12 снежня 2024, 09:10
Chinese scientist among 2024 UNEP's Champions of the Earth Award winners
NAIROBI, 12 December (BelTA - Xinhua) - Lu Qi, a Chinese scientist, is
among the six winners of the 2024 Champions of the Earth Award,
announced by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) in Nairobi,
Kenya's capital.
Honored in the Science and Innovation category,
Lu has spent three decades working in science and policy, helping China
reverse environmental degradation and reduce desertification, according
to the UNEP.
Additionally, Lu played a pivotal role in
implementing the world's largest afforestation project and in
establishing expert research networks and partnerships, the UNEP said in
a statement issued in Nairobi.
As the chief scientist at the
Chinese Academy of Forestry, Lu has championed multilateral cooperation
to combat desertification, land degradation and drought.
"This
award is the highest recognition and greatest encouragement for China's
forestry and grassland efforts, especially for the scientists and
technologists dedicated to sand control," Lu said in a statement to
Xinhua.
He said China's efforts to combat desertification over
the past seven decades have been rooted in scientific and technological
advancements supporting ecological progress.
The Champions of the
Earth Award would inspire more scientists and ecological practitioners,
particularly younger generations, to contribute actively to global
environmental protection and the achievement of the UN's 2030 Goals, he
said.
He also expressed a desire to see more effective and
adaptable desertification control technologies shared globally through
initiatives such as China's Belt and Road Initiative and the Global
Development Initiative.
"Together, we can contribute to building
two 'Great Green Walls' for the planet and make China's contribution to a
greener Earth," Lu said.
Since 2005, the Champions of the Earth
Award, UNEP's highest environmental honor, has recognized trailblazers
at the forefront of protecting the planet and its inhabitants.
The
award has honored 122 laureates for their exceptional ecological
stewardship, with the 2024 winners celebrated for their outstanding
leadership, bold actions and sustainable solutions to tackle land
degradation, drought and desertification.
Among the six winners
of the 2024 UNEP Champions of the Earth Award are Sonia Guajajara,
Brazil's minister of indigenous peoples; Amy Bowers Cordalis, an
Indigenous rights advocate from the United States; Gabriel Paun, a
Romanian environmental defender; Madhav Gadgil, an Indian ecologist; and
SEKEM, a sustainable agriculture initiative from Egypt.
UNEP
Executive Director Inger Andersen said the accomplishments of the 2024
Champions of the Earth Award winners remind humanity that the fight to
protect vital ecosystems, such as land, rivers and oceans, is
achievable.
"Almost 40 percent of the world's land is already
degraded, desertification is on the rise, and devastating droughts are
becoming more frequent. With the right policies, scientific
breakthroughs, system reforms, activism, and the vital leadership and
wisdom of Indigenous peoples, we can restore our ecosystems," Andersen
said.