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Huawei, IUCN and Global Partners Highlight Latest Technology for Nature Protection
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On the 50th anniversary of World Environment Day, Huawei and IUCN highlighted in the third Tech4Nature Summit smart solutions for supporting effective and fair management and governance of protected and conserved areas. They also emphasised the growing importance of technology in tracking threatened species and protecting their natural habitats.

Huawei and IUCN outlined a vision for protected and conserved areas to leverage digital technology to help achieve global biodiversity goals. At the launch of the “Smart Protected Areas White Paper,” Huawei shared the blueprint for building smart protected areas based on experience from China’s protected areas.

Obtaining Data Is Key to Preserving Nature

The key to wildlife protection is understanding the distribution, behaviours, seasonal and trends of species, along with  how human activities may impact their patterns. This requires extensive data, which can be challenging to attain given remote and hard-to-access areas, often exacerbated by extreme weather. Early data collection and research efforts relied on scientists going into the field to install camera traps to capture images. These cameras needed to be maintained, their batteries replaced and their memory cards replaced and analysed. These are time- and labour-intensive processes that frequently result in data and images that are several months old.

Implementing next-generation digital technologies, such as cloud computing, IoT, mobile Internet, big data and artificial intelligence, enables real-time data acquisition and interaction. This is key to improving smart sensing, analysis and management of species protection and area-based conservation efforts, making them more effective and thereby better at conserving nature.

Huawei: Working with Global Partners

Since 2019, Huawei has worked alongside 30 global partners, including IUCN, to apply digital technologies to achieve effective conservation and restoration outcomes in 46 protected and conserved areas worldwide. These include tropical rainforests in China’s Hainan—home to the world’s rarest gibbon—and wetland oasis in Italy.

“We have gained a lot in the past three years of cooperation, during which time Huawei has worked with us to demonstrate how to use new technologies responsibly to protect nature. IUCN looks forward to longer-term collaboration with Huawei as a tech leader to help achieve global goals such as the target to conserve at least 30% of  Earth’s land and water by 2030,” said Dr Grethel Aguilar, Deputy Director General at IUCN.

Dr Grethel Aguilar, Deputy Director General for IUCN, delivered a welcome speech at the summit

The primary aim of the “Smart Protected Areas White Paperis to realise the effective conservation of protected areas and the sustainable management of natural resources. Based on this target, the white paper identifies seven major scenarios, including ecological protection and restoration, resource management and scientific research.

The Four Critical Capabilities

In these identified scenarios, four key capabilities need to be implemented. These are:

  1. Comprehensive, multi-dimensional ecological sensing
  2. Integrated multi-network communications that can adapt to complex terrain
  3. Intelligent analysis that can process massive amounts of data from multiple sources
  4. Capability to apply analytical results to the operations and management of protected areas

“Biodiversity loss and climate change are two interrelated global environmental crises that require coordinated responses. While protecting nature, science and technology can also help thousands of industries with green development and better cope with climate change,” said Tao Jingwen, Huawei’s Director of the Board and Chairman of Corporate Sustainable Development (CSD) Committee.

Tao Jingwen, Director of the Board, Chairman of CSD Committee, Huawei

Peng Song, Senior Vice President and President of Huawei’s ICT Strategy & Marketing Department, said, “Earth is our only home. Digital technologies can help protect nature reserves more effectively and promote the sustainable management of natural resources. Our original intention is to sum up the practice of science and technology in helping protect nature and to work with partners to promote the intelligent construction of more nature reserves.”

Peng Song, Senior Vice President and President of Huawei’s ICT Strategy & Marketing Department

Real-World Examples

For example, the Yellow River Delta is a paradise for birds. It spans two of the world’s nine flyways for migratory birds and has become known as an “international airport for birds,” In 2022, Huawei’s TECH4ALL digital inclusion project team piloted a smart biodiversity monitoring project in the protected area, using big data, IoT, remote sensing, radar and drones to build a space-air-ground integrated monitoring network.

“Birds migrate across borders, bringing different countries and regions together and creating a shared community where humans coexist with nature. Thanks to digital technology, conservationists can monitor birds 24/7, without disturbing their habitats. This is the best way to respect and protect species”, said Shan Kai, scientific researcher at the Yellow River Delta National Nature Reserve.

According to the WEF’s New Nature Economy Report, more than half of the world’s GDP, about US$44 trillion, relies on nature and the services it provides. However, climate change and biodiversity loss are threatening the survival and sustainable development of humanity. A new nature economy could generate up to $10.1 trillion in annual business value and create 395 million jobs by 2030.

A Vital Summit

To explore the future potential of smart nature conservation, the summit brought together TECH4ALL partners, including the Yucatan state government of Mexico, the Mexican innovation agency C Minds, IUCN China, WWF Italy, Rainforest Connection, and Shandong Yellow River Delta National Nature Reserve.

Click to watch the summit.

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