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Conservation Index tool spotlights biodiversity gaps in 180 countries

By Faridat Salifu

With biodiversity under increasing threat worldwide a tool known as the Nature Conservation Index (NCI), has been launched to assess how countries are managing conservation efforts amid increasing environmental challenges.
The NCI evaluates 180 countries using 25 key indicators related to biodiversity protection, legal frameworks, and future conservation risks.
The tool was developed by BioDB.com in partnership with the Goldman Sonnenfeldt School of Sustainability and Climate Change at Ben-Gurion University.
The NCI aims to provide governments, researchers, and conservation organisations with a clear picture of how countries are balancing conservation with development pressures.
The index is expected to guide better policies and more effective resource allocation for long-term biodiversity protection.
BioDB’s CEO, Assaf Levy, explained the purpose behind the index. He said: “Biodiversity loss, species extinction, and climate change are often overlooked in public discussions. We needed a way to make complex scientific data more accessible to the general public and policymakers.”
The NCI breaks down this data into a more digestible format, allowing for easier understanding and quicker action.
It measures conservation efforts through four key pillars: land management, threats to biodiversity, governance capacity, and future trends.
For land management, the index looks at how well countries protect their terrestrial and marine ecosystems, while the threats pillar evaluates risks like species endangerment and habitat loss.
The governance pillar assesses national policies, international cooperation, and resources dedicated to conservation. Future trends focus on whether countries are likely to meet long-term environmental targets.
Despite growing awareness, the NCI monitoring shows that many regions face serious conservation challenges in Africa, with its rich biodiversity, struggles against habitat loss from deforestation, pollution, and rapid urbanisation.
In South and Central America, particularly in the Amazon rainforest, deforestation and illegal wildlife trade pose significant threats to regional and global ecosystems.
Southeast Asia faces similar pressures from industrial expansion and wildlife trafficking, putting its delicate ecological systems at risk.
The NCI emphasises the urgent need for strategic, forward-looking conservation efforts.
While some progress has been made, the report makes clear that many countries are falling short of the global sustainability goals outlined in international agreements.
It calls for strengthened collaboration between nations to address these growing environmental crises.

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