The
 10th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological 
Diversity (COP10) began on October 18 in Nagoya, Japan, where delegates 
from about 200 countries, including governments, non-governmental 
organizations, business and civil society, have been discussing 
solutions to the urgent decline of plant and wildlife. 
According
 to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, we are losing 
species 1,000 times faster than the natural rate of extinction, with 
potentially devastating consequences to ecosystems. Supreme Master 
Television’s correspondent reports from location. 
Japanese Correspondent (F):
 Here at the Nagoya International Congress Center in Nagoya, Aichi, 
Japan, COP10 is the conference gathering over 15,000 people from the 
member countries and regions to discuss international schemes which 
enable the fulfillment of the purpose of the Convention on Biological 
Diversity.
Jaydee Hanson – Center for Food Safety, USA (M): The
 hope is that the nations of the world will come together and find ways 
to both stop destroying the planet and pay for groups and countries to 
help save it.
Correspondent (F): Biological
 diversity means the interconnection of the lives and individualities. 
Various kinds of lives exist on Earth, and are maintained in balance by 
holding various differences of ecosystem,species, and genes. However, 
due to human-made development, overhunting and overfishing as well as 
human-induced disturbance of ecosystems caused by introduced species, 
both species and ecosystems are in danger lately. 
Wakao Hanaoka – Oceans campaigner, Greenpeace (M):
 Marine biodiversity has especially been seriously destroyed. Why? It’s 
due to destructive fishing such as trawling. In particular, the issue of
 the marine protected areas, how we can solve marine problems, is a 
focal point of the COP10.
Luis Delgado Hurtado – President, Yachay Wasi (NGO with UN consultative status) (M):
 I think it’s really critical that we are talking about our life and not
 only species, because we are part of the species – human species.
VOICE:
 Specific goals of the summit include creating a new 20-point plan of 
goals for the next decade to protect biodiversity from forest and other 
habitat degradation as well as pollution, while raising public 
awareness, and ensuring the sustainable management of ecosystems. 
Jaydee Hanson – Policy analyst, Center for Food Safety, USA (M):
 It’s really the way we farm that’s contributing to these dead zones. 
The soils run off, the soils contain high levels of fertilizers, 
pesticides, and herbicides that kill the ocean. 
As long as we 
keep dumping on so much fertilizer, as long as we crowd cows together 
and make so much waste and crowd pigs together and make so much waste, 
we’re going to have dead zones. 
Until we really make it a part of 
the agricultural work that we do – that agriculture has to preserve 
biodiversity – then it’s not going to happen. 
Shohei Honda – Press Officer, Biodiversity on the Brink (NGO), Japan (M):
 I really would like COP10 to decide to formulate strong and binding 
post-2010 goals to enable a biodiversity loss of zero by 2020.
Correspondent (F):
 We greatly look forward to the success of COP10 so that all the beings 
will be able to live safely and peacefully as members of our ecosystem 
on Earth. This is Supreme Master Television reporting from Nagoya, 
Japan.
VOICE: To all participants, our appreciation and best 
wishes for a fruitful conference. May bold efforts prioritizing the root
 causes of biodiversity loss be quickly addressed for the planetary 
survival of all. 
Jaydee Hanson – Policy analyst, Center for Food Safety, USA (M):
 I’m Jaydee Hanson from the Center for Food Safety. Be Veg, Go Green 2 
Save the Planet! Long concerned about the alarming rate of species loss,
 Supreme Master Ching Hai has emphasized the need to act in halting one 
of its root causes, as during a July 2008 videoconference in Formosa 
(Taiwan).
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 Up to now, we have lost so many, not just marine life, but land 
species. They disappear faster than we can imagine. They suffer a lot, 
they die, or they completely disappear because of our careless 
management of the world.
And we just feel like it doesn’t concern
 us or that we are not responsible for their plight,for the death and 
disappearance of our precious co-inhabitants. But the fact is that we 
are responsible. 
We have to stop the harmful effect of meat 
consumption; then we will see a happy, sufficient and satisfied world 
manifest in front of our eyes in a matter of weeks.
http://www.cbd.int/cop10/http://www.globalissues.org/article/171/loss-of-biodiversity-and-extinctions http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/19/world/asia/19tokyo.html?_r=1