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A reformed Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) will enter into force in 2023. This assessment analyses whether they will deliver on their climate objectives.
Marking their vital importance to waterbirds and ‘outstanding universal value’, four key tidal mudflats in Korea have now been inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site – the culmination of a huge conservation effort for recognition at the highest level.
Business as usual and mass funding of nature destruction under new Common Agricultural Policy
It was the most ambitious and logistically challenging island restoration project to date. The aim in 2015: to turn some of the world’s rarest birds back from a path to extinction by removing introduced predators from remote French Polynesian islands. Now the birds are truly bouncing back, giving hope for future restorations.
Conservation isn’t just about preserving pristine natural habitats. To thoroughly address the climate and extinction crises, we also need to restore ecosystems that have been degraded or converted to other uses. But where to start? BirdLife’s Chief Scientist Dr Stuart Butchart discusses a new study he co‑authored.
Audubon, one of the two BirdLife Partners in the United States, has announced the appointment of Dr. Elizabeth Gray as their new CEO.
After more than three years of co-decision processes where the European Council, Commission, and Parliament worked on the new the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), the legislative process is finally coming to a close. The European Parliament is set to vote to approve the CAP on the 23th of November and the Council early in December.
Massive but mysterious: for decades, little was known about the Sei Whale. But thanks to ground-breaking research, the Falkland Islands (Malvinas) have now been declared a Key Biodiversity Area based on their status as a vital habitat for the species.
BirdLife CEO, Patricia Zurita, announces the exciting arrival yesterday of our new Chief Development Officer, E.J. McAdams.
On the 23th of November, the European Parliament is set to approve the final deal on the next Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) agreed on in June 2021. It shouldn’t.
A new study on breeding birds in the EU shows one out of every six birds over nearly a 40 -year period has been lost. Overall, we have lost around 600 million breeding birds in the EU since 1980.
The Low Impact Fishers of Europe and environmental NGOs ClientEarth, BirdLife and WWF call on EU countries to stop funding destructive industrial fishing with EU taxpayers’ money.