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Int´l organizations support for creating green jobs

Geneva, Sep 3 (Prensa Latina) The International Labor Organization (ILO) and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) on Thursday agreed upon promoting and supporting the creation of green, decent jobs through environmental rehabilitation.

ILO and IUCN signed a new Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) the collaboration in terms of job creation through investments in reforestation, soil and water conservation and adaptation to climate change.

The MOU is intended to formalize the already ongoing collaboration between the two organizations to promote and support, among other things, Green Works , the creation of decent jobs through investments in reforestation, soil and water conservation, environmental rehabilitation and climate change adaptation.

It also underlines the significance of Nature-based Solutions (NbS), which use nature to address key societal challenges like increasing agricultural productivity and incomes through the use of more sustainable agro-forestry practices or the promotion of urban greening to reduce temperatures in cities.

As many as 1.2 billion jobs rely directly on ecosystems and the services they provide – be it through the provision of food and water, the regulation of the climate system or the control of disease vectors. At the same time, increasingly important activities such as ecosystem restoration have the potential to create many jobs.

‘If we are serious about creating decent work for all in line with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), we must not forget that today’s jobs and tomorrow’s depend on preserving ecosystems and are sensitive to the loss of biodiversity. Simply put, without a healthy planet, there can be no productive economies nor decent work,’ said ILO Director-General Guy Ryder.

‘In this post-Covid recovery journey, we must avoid investments that are harmful to nature, which means that we must avoid ‘business as usual’. Moreover, recovery investments should support nature conservation and restoration, while also addressing economic recovery and broader societal challenges’, said IUCN Director-General Bruno Oberle.

The ILO, the UN agency for the world of work, in partnership with IUCN, the global authority on the status of the natural world and measures to safeguard it, are ideally positioned to lead and support silo-breaking, cross-sectoral and innovative solutions for people and nature.

pgh/Pll/msm / crc

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