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Protect species? Curb warming? Save money? Bidenโ€™s big conservation goal means trade-offs

February 3, 2021 โ€” President Joe Biden last week unveiled an ambitious conservation goal, unprecedented for the United States: conserving 30% of the countryโ€™s lands and waters by 2030, which would require more than doubling the area of public and private holdings under heightened protections.

Conservation scientists welcomed the so-called 30-by-30 goal, announced in an executive order on climate released 27 January. โ€œThe ambition is fantastic,โ€ says ecologist Joshua Tewksbury, interim executive director of the nonprofit Future Earth.

But Bidenโ€™s order also raises a thorny practical question: Which swaths of land and sea should be the top targets for enhanced protection or management? The order says the effort should aim for a number of outcomes, including preserving biodiversity, curbing climate change, and even creating jobs and reducing social inequality. But researchers warn that difficult trade-offs lie ahead, because few chunks of territory are likely to provide all of the desired benefits. โ€œThe balancing act [will be] the hardest part of this work,โ€ Tewksbury says.

Observers say the Biden administration could make rapid progress and contain costs by enhancing protections for territory already owned by the federal government. โ€œWe can make really huge gains on Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management lands,โ€ says Jacob Malcom, a conservation biologist with Defenders of Wildlife. That could mean reducing logging, mining, drilling, and grazing. โ€œThere will be vested interests who are not happy about that,โ€ Malcom notes. โ€œSo I donโ€™t want to make it seem like itโ€™s going to be easy.โ€ Fishing associations, for example, have already reacted with concern to proposals to ban commercial fishing in 30% of U.S. waters. โ€œThirty-by-thirty is a campaign slogan, not a scientific proposal,โ€ Robert Vanasse, executive director of Saving Seafood, wrote last year.

Read the full story at Science Magazine

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