Coastal ecosystems like wetlands and mangroves accumulate and store carbon in their roots. And we’ve already covered what forests can do. Freshwater wetlands hold between 20 to 30 percent of all the carbon found in the world’s soil. This should make it clear: To address climate change (and the
overlapping biodiversity crisis), we have to preserve nature.
That’s why climate experts are calling on world leaders to fully protect and restore at least 30 percent of lands, inland waters, and oceans by 2030—a conservation initiative nicknamed “30x30.” (Just
17 percent of the planet’s lands and 8 percent of its oceans currently qualify as protected, though estimates vary.)
To get there, governments will need to stop industrial abuse of public lands and waters, support the creation of marine protected areas, uphold bedrock environmental laws like the Endangered Species Act, and follow the lead of Indigenous Peoples, many of whom have been faithfully and sustainably stewarding lands and waters for millennia.
All of this, of course, will take funding. We’ll tackle that next week, when we dive into the role of green banks to solve the climate crisis.