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How is our planet doing? WWF releases Living Planet Report 2020
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0:34 Håkan Wirtén, Secretary General of WWF Sweden, provides the background to Living Planet Report
4:56 Louise Carlsson, WWF conservation expert, presents Living Planet Report 2020 and the trend for biodiversity
23:59 Torbjörn Ebenhard, research leader at the Center for Biological Diversity, SLU - what happens at the global meetings on biological diversity and how is diversity measured?
28:14 Åsa Fahlman, veterinarian and associate professor of wildlife medicine at the Center for Biological Diversity, SLU, talks about her work with species & migration of endangered Sumatran rhinos in Indonesia.
32:45 Erika Sundell, Manager Corporate Partnerships at WWF - how can companies work to benefit biodiversity?
41:51 Cecilia Strömblad Brännsten, Environmental Sustainability Manager at H&M Group, talks about the company's new plan for biological diversity
49:46 Andris Salo sends a video greeting from the Dayak Kenyah indigenous people in Indonesia
54:27 Luca Berardi, WWF Sweden Youth, talks about how young people can get involved in issues around nature and biodiversity.
55:41 Håkan Wirtén summarizes the most important measures in a conversation with Charlotte Permell.
The diversity of life on earth is drastically decreasing and research indicates that we may be on the way to the sixth mass extinction on the planet. At the same time, the pressure on our natural resources is increasing both on land, in freshwater and in the sea.
WWF's Living Planet Report is published every two years and measures biodiversity and the ecological footprint. The citizen of the world today lives as if we had 1.6 planets at our disposal.
This year's updated Living Planet Index shows how the world's vertebrates are doing and the populations have changed since 1970. It has been developed by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) in collaboration with WWF. WWF also highlights the state of nature and diversity in Sweden - and presents requirements for Swedish politicians to act globally and at home.
4:56 Louise Carlsson, WWF conservation expert, presents Living Planet Report 2020 and the trend for biodiversity
23:59 Torbjörn Ebenhard, research leader at the Center for Biological Diversity, SLU - what happens at the global meetings on biological diversity and how is diversity measured?
28:14 Åsa Fahlman, veterinarian and associate professor of wildlife medicine at the Center for Biological Diversity, SLU, talks about her work with species & migration of endangered Sumatran rhinos in Indonesia.
32:45 Erika Sundell, Manager Corporate Partnerships at WWF - how can companies work to benefit biodiversity?
41:51 Cecilia Strömblad Brännsten, Environmental Sustainability Manager at H&M Group, talks about the company's new plan for biological diversity
49:46 Andris Salo sends a video greeting from the Dayak Kenyah indigenous people in Indonesia
54:27 Luca Berardi, WWF Sweden Youth, talks about how young people can get involved in issues around nature and biodiversity.
55:41 Håkan Wirtén summarizes the most important measures in a conversation with Charlotte Permell.
The diversity of life on earth is drastically decreasing and research indicates that we may be on the way to the sixth mass extinction on the planet. At the same time, the pressure on our natural resources is increasing both on land, in freshwater and in the sea.
WWF's Living Planet Report is published every two years and measures biodiversity and the ecological footprint. The citizen of the world today lives as if we had 1.6 planets at our disposal.
This year's updated Living Planet Index shows how the world's vertebrates are doing and the populations have changed since 1970. It has been developed by the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) in collaboration with WWF. WWF also highlights the state of nature and diversity in Sweden - and presents requirements for Swedish politicians to act globally and at home.