Progress slow at COP15 talks but some agreement achieved, says environment minister
MONTREAL — Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said Friday he’s trying to light a fire under his international colleagues to pick up the pace on negotiations at an international meeting on saving the planet’s biodiversity.
“I have already spoken to my peers, asking them to instruct their delegations to start removing brackets,” he said. “It’s no longer time to add new text.
“There’s a lot of things that negotiators could deal with before ministers arrive and that’s what we’re asking them to do.”
After nearly a week of deliberations, negotiators at the COP15 meeting in Montreal have reached agreements on three of 22 targets. Although one of them — ensuring Indigenous people are consulted and play a role in new conservation agreements — is one Canada’s main goals, Guilbeault said he’d hoped for more consensus before other environment ministers start arriving next week.

