On December 8, Li Haidong, Deputy Director of the Ecological Civilization Construction Research Center of the Nanjing Institute of Environmental Sciences of the Ministry of Ecology and Environment, and his delegation visited the Low Carbon Development Center and held a discussion and exchange on the China-Norway cooperation project "China's Biodiversity Conservation under Climate Change". Relevant technical personnel of the low-carbon development center participated in the discussion.
At the symposium, the two sides introduced their basic situation and main work in detail, focusing on the policies and measures of biodiversity conservation in the autonomous region under the background of climate change, the research on the sequestration status and influencing factors of soil organic carbon, and the promotion and display of project research results. The two sides expressed that they will take this forum as an opportunity to carry out in-depth assistance and cooperation, jointly promote the implementation of the decisions of the 15th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity, and help the implementation of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.
This cooperation is an important measure to implement the requirements of the Party Group of the Department of "Running to Beijing" and the State Council's "Opinions on Promoting the High-quality Development of Inner Mongolia and Striving to Write a New Chapter of Chinese-style Modernization", which further strengthens the technical exchanges and cooperation between our region and domestic and foreign countries in the field of biodiversity conservation and climate change, and effectively enhances the technical level and influence of our region in related fields. In the next step, the Low Carbon Development Center will continue to strengthen communication with Nanjing Institute of Environmental Sciences, further clarify the cooperation objectives, research content and work plan, steadily promote the smooth implementation of the project, and contribute to the response to climate change and biodiversity conservation in our region.