(Press-News.org) As world leaders begin COP30 climate negotiations in Brazil this week, an international team co-led by a University of Sydney researcher has warned of a hidden crisis undermining global biodiversity and carbon targets: the quiet abandonment of conservation projects.
The comment paper, ‘Conservation abandonment is a policy blind spot’, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution, was co-led by Dr Matthew Clark, a postdoctoral researcher in the Thriving Oceans Research Hub at the University of Sydney and an honorary research associate in the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College London.
Dr Clark said that conservatively, US$87 billion is spent annually on conservation programs and that figure can climb to US$200 billion depending on what exactly is counted.
“As we grapple with the biodiversity and climate crises, these required investments are expected to be US$540 billion by 2030 and US$740 billion by 2050,” Dr Clark said. “While these investments are essential for meeting both carbon and biodiversity goals, we have virtually no line of sight on how long these programs endure.
“Evidence suggests at least one third are abandoned just a few years after implementation.
This blind spot potentially compromises progress announced at events like COP, as meaningful ecological recovery can take decades,” he said.
“If we only count the implementation of programs, this will inflate estimates of progress.”
The international viewpoint was co-authored with researchers from Imperial College London, the University of Kent, Monash University and other institutions. The lead authors worked closely with Associate Professor Morena Mills who leads the Catalyzing Conservation group at Imperial College London.
The paper introduces the concept of ‘conservation abandonment’ – where responsible parties simply informally fail to fulfil their duties or where laws or other agreements are formally changed to reverse formal protections.
These abandoned projects, though inactive, are frequently still included in official reporting, masking the true state of environmental protection.
“We’re racing to meet global targets like protecting 30 per cent of land and sea by 2030,” said Associate Professor Carly Cook, a co-author from Monash University’s School of Biological Sciences.
“But no one’s asking if the parks we’ve established are still being managed, or if the projects that we’ve started even still exist in any meaningful way.”
The team found that the legal protection for conservation areas has been undermined more than 3700 times globally in what are called PADDD events (Protected Area Downgrading, Downsizing and Degazettement). Alongside formal rollbacks, they also reveal widespread abandonment of community-led conservation programs in Africa and South America.
In Chile, 22 percent of Territorial Use Rights in fisheries assigned to local communities were later discontinued. In Canada, the formal downgrading in a marine conservation area opened up oil exploratory drilling in 26,450 square kilometres. Morocco and Canada collectively disestablished seven conservation areas totalling 2412 square kilometres.
The authors warn that Australia is not immune, with many programs underfunded or quietly dropped after initial fanfare.
Associate Professor Cook said: “Australia has a disappointing record of reducing protections for national parks and protected areas, including for the Great Barrier Reef.
“We also have a huge network of Marine Protected Areas but there is very little active management or enforcement.” Research from 2021 shows Marine Protected Areas have had protection downgraded 38 times affecting more than 1 million square kilometres.
Her research points to She also points to ongoing concerns in the accounting of carbon offset credits.
The authors call for a global monitoring system to track conservation abandonment, more robust long-term funding and greater transparency in environmental accounting.
“The reality is that the launch of a new conservation project is just the beginning,” Dr Clark said. “These initiatives will need to continue for decades, or sometimes in perpetuity, to yield real change. In many cases, when funding ends or when responsibilities are dropped, we go right back to where we started.”
Joint corresponding author, Dr Tom Pienkowski at the University of Kent, said: “This topic is particularly timely given recent global political events that threaten to erode conservation gains achieved over recent decades.
“The Trump administration has cut more than US$365 million in funding for international conservation initiatives. Such policy changes risk legitimising and foreshadowing an acceleration in conservation abandonment on a global scale.”
The findings arrive as COP30 delegates prepare to assess global progress toward biodiversity and carbon goals, highlighting the urgent need for policies that ensure conservation measures persist over time.
Download an embargoed copy of the paper at this link.
Interviews
Dr Matthew Clark | matthew.clark@sydney.edu.au
Dr Thomas Pienkowski | t.pienkowski@kent.ac.uk
Associate Professor Carly Cook | carly.cook@monash.edu
Media enquiries
Marcus Strom | marcus.strom@sydney.edu.au | +61 474 269 459
Outside of work hours, please call +61 2 8627 0246 (directs to a mobile number) or email media.office@sydney.edu.au.
Comment paper
Pienkowski, T., Clark, M. et al ‘Conservation abandonment is a policy blind spot’. (Nature Ecology & Evolution 2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41559-025-02910-5
Declaration
The authors declare no competing interests.
Background references for Australia
Australia has downgraded protection for protected areas over 1500 times.
Cook, C et al ‘Quantifying the extent of protected-area downgrading, downsizing and degazettement in Australia (Conservation Biology 2017)
Australia has downgraded protection for MPAs more than 38 times, impacting over a million square kilometres
Albrecht, R. et al ‘Protected area downgrading, downsizing and degazettement (PADDD) in marine protected areas’ (Marine Policy 2021)
Australia downgraded protection for part of World Heritage Great Barrier Reef
Qin, S. et al ‘Protected area downgrading, downsizing, and degazettement as a threat to iconic protected areas’ (Conservation Biology 2019)
END
COP30: Global nature goals at risk as conservation projects quietly fail
‘Conservation abandonment’ leads to poor environmental accounting
2025-11-10
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
New treatment for combating iron deficiency more effectively
2025-11-10
Iron deficiency is globally widespread. Women are particularly affected, with one in five in Europe suffering from iron deficiency. The consequences are anaemia, constant fatigue, chronic headaches and a weakened immune system. Researchers led by ETH professor Raffaele Mezzenga have now developed a new dietary supplement that could efficiently treat iron deficiency and anaemia. This development is being co-led by Michael B. Zimmermann, professor emeritus at ETH Zurich. The preparation consists of edible oat protein ...
A new AI-powered method to automate material analysis and design
2025-11-10
Understanding the properties of different materials is an important step in material design. X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) is an important technique for this, as it reveals detailed insights about a material’s composition, structure, and functional characteristics. The technique works by directing a beam of high-energy X-rays at a sample and recording how X-rays of different energy levels are absorbed. Similar to how white light splits into a rainbow after passing through a prism, XAS produces a spectrum of X-rays with different energies. This spectrum is called as spectral data, which acts like an unique fingerprint of a material, ...
Security flaws in portable genetic sequencers risk leaking private DNA data
2025-11-10
Portable genetic sequencers used around the world to sequence DNA have critical, previously unreported security vulnerabilities that could reveal or alter genetic information without detection, according to a new study.
Researchers from the University of Florida have, for the first time, exposed these security risks in devices from Oxford Nanopore Technologies, which produces nearly all the portable genetic sequencers in the world.
Alerted by the security researchers, Oxford Nanopore Technologies has rolled out updated software to patch the vulnerabilities. But out-of-date software, or unsecured internet systems, could still leave some DNA sequencers vulnerable ...
‘Roadmap’ shows the environmental impact of AI data center boom
2025-11-10
ITHACA, N.Y. - As the everyday use of AI has exploded in recent years, so have the energy demands of the computing infrastructure that supports it. But the environmental toll of these large data centers, which suck up gigawatts of power and require vast amounts of water for cooling, has been too diffuse and difficult to quantify.
Now, Cornell researchers have used advanced data analytics – and, naturally, some AI, too – to create a state-by-state look at that environmental impact. The team found that, by 2030, the current rate of AI growth would annually put 24 to 44 million metric tons of carbon dioxide into the ...
Scientists discover chameleon’s telephone-cord-like optic nerves once overlooked by Aristotle and Newton
2025-11-10
Chameleons’ wandering eyes have fascinated and puzzled scientists since the days of ancient Greece. Now, after millennia of study, modern imaging has revealed the secret of their nearly 360-degree view and uncanny ability to look in two different directions at once. Behind their bulging eyes lie two long, coiled optic nerves — a structure not seen in any other lizard.
“Chameleon eyes are like security cameras, moving in all directions,” explained Juan Daza, associate professor at Sam Houston State University and author of a new study describing the trait. “They ...
One enzyme could be behind alcohol addiction and liver disease
2025-11-10
AURORA, Colo. (November 10, 2025) – Scientists have uncovered a surprising connection between sugar metabolism and alcohol addiction, identifying a potential new therapeutic target for treating alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD) and alcohol use disorder (AUD).
In a new study, out today in Nature Metabolism, University of Colorado Anschutz researchers found that alcohol triggers a metabolic pathway in the body that leads to the internal production of fructose, the same type of sugar commonly ...
Neanderthal DNA helps explain how faces form
2025-11-10
Every human face is unique, allowing us to distinguish between individuals. We know little about how facial features are encoded in our DNA, but we may be able to learn more about how our faces develop by looking at our ancient relatives, the Neanderthals. Neanderthal faces were quite distinctive from our own, with large noses, pronounced brows and a robust lower jaw. Now, scientists from the MRC Human Genetics Unit in the Institute of Genetics and Cancer at the University of Edinburgh, UK, are using the DNA of our extinct ...
New nasal vaccine has potential to transform respiratory disease prevention
2025-11-10
A research team from Trinity College Dublin has unveiled a groundbreaking new approach to vaccination that could redefine how we protect against respiratory infections. In a landmark study published in Nature Microbiology, the team demonstrated that their nasally-delivered, antibiotic-inactivated Bordetella pertussis (AIBP) vaccine not only prevents severe disease but also curbs bacterial transmission — an achievement long sought by vaccine developers worldwide.
The work, led by Professor Kingston Mills and Dr Davoud Jazayeri of Trinity’s School of Biochemistry ...
How plastics grip metals at the atomic scale
2025-11-10
What makes some plastics stick to metal without any glue? Osaka Metropolitan University scientists peered into the invisible adhesive zone that forms between certain plastics and metals — one atom at a time — to uncover how chemistry and molecular structure determine whether such bonds bend or break.
Their insights clarify metal–plastic bonding mechanisms and offer guidelines for designing durable, lightweight, and more sustainable hybrid materials for use in transportation.
Combining the strength of metal with the lightness and flexibility of plastic, polymer–metal hybrid structures are emerging as key elements for building lighter, more fuel-efficient vehicles. ...
Human impact on Amazon forests is transforming its ecological functions and evolutionary history
2025-11-10
A new study reveals that the impact humans are having on the Amazon rainforest is so profound it is even changing the evolutionary history and functionality of the forests.
As the world gathers at COP30 to discuss climate in the world’s largest rainforest, the focus is often on the carbon that these forests either store or sequester.
However, tropical forests are much more than just carbon: they are among the biggest reservoirs of biodiversity on the planet. For example, the Amazon holds up to 16,000 species of tree alone, with a single hectare frequently holding more than 300 species. In comparison, the UK has just 32 species of ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New study reveals devastating impact of cane toads approaching the Pilbara
COP30: Global nature goals at risk as conservation projects quietly fail
New treatment for combating iron deficiency more effectively
A new AI-powered method to automate material analysis and design
Security flaws in portable genetic sequencers risk leaking private DNA data
‘Roadmap’ shows the environmental impact of AI data center boom
Scientists discover chameleon’s telephone-cord-like optic nerves once overlooked by Aristotle and Newton
One enzyme could be behind alcohol addiction and liver disease
Neanderthal DNA helps explain how faces form
New nasal vaccine has potential to transform respiratory disease prevention
How plastics grip metals at the atomic scale
Human impact on Amazon forests is transforming its ecological functions and evolutionary history
Could a liquid biopsy test lead to earlier diagnoses for numerous cancer types?
Link found between chronic fatigue and abnormal breathing could lead to new treatments
Beauty and fear
Between solstices and equinoxes
New study gives people with eczema freedom to choose how often to bathe
Children’s dental health still very poor despite interventions
Hospital patients who feel short of breath are six times more likely to die
Existing evidence does not clearly link paracetamol use during pregnancy with autism or ADHD in children
Should kids be screened for high cholesterol genes?
Weight loss drugs don’t increase the risk of pancreatitis or adverse cardiac events in patients with high triglycerides
Major international study confirms that beta-blockers are no longer needed in post-infarction patients with normal heart function
Targeted vitamin D3 supplementation cuts risk of heart attack patients having a second heart attack in half, new intermountain health study finds
Any form of hypertension during pregnancy significantly increases postpartum cardiovascular risk including death, new study finds
Opening all blocked arteries with stents reduces risk of death from cardiovascular causes compared with opening only the culprit artery in heart attack patients
More prenatal visits linked to right level of care for infants born with heart defects
Drink Up: Coffee is safe for people with A-Fib
Study reports on global trends in acute kidney injury– related mortality
Study reveals a potentially better way to optimize the timing for kidney transplant waitlisting
[Press-News.org] COP30: Global nature goals at risk as conservation projects quietly fail‘Conservation abandonment’ leads to poor environmental accounting