Nature security assessment on global biodiversity loss, ecosystem collapse and national security

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This assessment is an analysis of how global biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse could affect UK national security.
This assessment, which was developed by analysts and experts across HM Government, supports long-term resilience planning. Publishing the assessment highlights opportunities for innovation, green finance and global partnerships that can drive growth while safeguarding the ecosystems that underpin our collective security and prosperity.
Key Conclusions
The world is already experiencing impacts including crop failures, intensified natural disasters and infectious disease outbreaks. Threats will increase with degradation and intensify with collapse. Without major intervention to reverse the current trend, this is highly likely to continue to 2050 and beyond.
Analytical Confidence Rating: High
Severe degradation or collapse of these would highly likely result in water insecurity, severely reduced crop yields, a global reduction in arable land, fisheries collapse, changes to global weather patterns, release of trapped carbon exacerbating climate change, novel zoonotic diseases and loss of pharmaceutical resources. The Amazon rainforest, Congo rainforest, boreal forests, the Himalayas and South East Asia’s coral reefs and mangroves are particularly significant for the UK.
Analytical Confidence Rating: High
Some will be exposed sooner than others and are likely to act to secure their interests, particularly water and food security.
Analytical Confidence Rating: Moderate
The UK relies on imports for a proportion of both food and fertiliser and cannot currently produce enough food to feed its population based on current diets. Countries best placed to adapt are those that invest in ecosystem protection and restoration, and resilient and efficient food systems.
Analytical Confidence Rating: Moderate
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The description was excerpted from the report's site and key judgements section.
