Advertising

The Bright Side: UNESCO designates 26 new biosphere reserves including France's Lake Bourget

Environment

United Nations cultural agency UNESCO has designated 26 new biosphere reserves across 21 countries to tackle biodiversity challenges and worsening climate change. Lake Bourget in the French Alps was among those listed along with the marshes and tides between France's Loire and Vilaine rivers.

A woman protects herself from the sun along Lake Bourget, in Le Bourget-du-Lac, in the French Alps, on August 8, 2025.
A woman protects herself from the sun along Lake Bourget, in Le Bourget-du-Lac, in the French Alps, on August 8, 2025. © Jean-Philippe Ksiazek, AFP

An Indonesian archipelago that's home to three-fourths of Earth's coral species, a stretch of Icelandic coast with 70 percent of the country's plant life and an area along Angola's Atlantic coast featuring savannahs, forests and estuaries are among 26 new UNESCO-designated biosphere reserves.

Lake Bourget in the French Alps was among the areas designated a biosphere reserve – with the UN citing its more than 6,100 listed animal and plant species – along with the marshes and tides between the Loire and the Vilaine rivers.  

The United Nations cultural agency says the reserves – 785 sites in 142 countries, designated since 1971 – are home to some of the planet’s richest and most fragile ecosystems. But biosphere reserves encompass more than strictly protected nature reserves; they're expanded to include areas where people live and work, and the designation requires that scientists, residents and government officials work together to balance conservation and research with local economic and cultural needs.

Read moreThe Bright Side: Malawi's sacred Mount Mulanje added to UNESCO World Heritage List

“The concept of biosphere reserves is that biodiversity conservation is a pillar of socioeconomic development” and can contribute to the economy, said António Abreu, head of the programme, adding that conflict and misunderstanding can result if local communities are left out of decision-making and planning. 

The new reserves, in 21 countries, were announced Saturday in Hangzhou, China, where the program adopted a 10-year strategic action plan that includes studying the effects of climate change, Abreu said. 

The new reserves include a 52,000-square-mile (135,000-square-kilometre) area in the Indonesian archipelago, Raja Ampat, home to over 75 percent of earth’s coral species as well as rainforests and rare endangered sea turtles. The economy depends on fishing, aquaculture, small-scale agriculture and tourism, UNESCO said.

Antelopes huddle in the bush after being released in the Quicama National Park, Sept. 16, 2000, about 75 kilometers (47 miles) south of Angola's capital of Luanda.
Antelopes huddle in the bush after being released in the Quicama National Park September 16, 2000, about 75 kilometres (47 miles) south of Angola's capital of Luanda. © Armando Franca, AP

On Iceland's west coast, the Snæfellsnes Biosphere Reserve's landscape includes volcanic peaks, lava fields, wetlands, grasslands and the Snæfellsjökull glacier. The 1,460-square-kilometre (564 square-mile) reserve is an important sanctuary for seabirds, seals and over 70 percent of Iceland's plant life – including 330 species of wildflowers and ferns. Its population of more than 4,000 people relies on fishing, sheep farming and tourism.

And in Angola, the new Quiçama Biosphere Reserve, along 206 kilometres (128 miles) of Atlantic coast is a “sanctuary for biodiversity” within its savannahs, forests, flood plains, estuaries and islands, according to UNESCO. It's home to elephants, manatees, sea turtles and more than 200 bird species. Residents' livelihoods include livestock herding, farming, fishing, honey production.

Residents are important partners in protecting biodiversity within the reserves, and even have helped identify new species, said Abreu, the program's leader. Meanwhile, scientists also are helping to restore ecosystems to benefit the local economy, he said.

Read moreThe Bright Side: Earth's ozone layer is healing thanks to international action, UN says

For example, in the Philippines, the coral reefs around Pangatalan Island were severely damaged because local fishermen used dynamite to find depleted fish populations. Scientists helped design a structure to help coral reefs regrow and taught fishermen to raise fish through aquaculture so the reefs could recover.

“They have food and they have also fish to sell in the markets,” said Abreu.

In the African nation of Sao Tome and Príncipe, a biosphere reserve on Príncipe Island led to restoration of mangroves, which help buffer against storm surges and provide important habitat, Abreu said.

Ecotourism also has become an important industry, with biosphere trails and guided bird-watching tours. A new species of owl was identified there in recent years. 

A manta ray swims in the water near Raja Ampat islands, Indonesia, October 18, 2011.
A manta ray swims in the water near Raja Ampat islands, Indonesia, October 18, 2011. © AP, Herman Harsoyo

This year, a biosphere reserve was added for the island of Sao Tome, making the country the first entirely within a reserve.

At least 60 percent of the UNESCO biosphere reserves have been affected by extreme weather tied to climate change, which is caused primarily by the burning of fossil fuels such as coal and gas, including extreme heat and drought and sea-level rise, Abreu said.

The agency is using satellite imagery and computer modelling to monitor changes in coastal zones and other areas, and is digitising its historical databases, Abreu said. The information will be used to help determine how best to preserve and manage the reserves.

Read moreThe Bright Side: Hong Kong scientist fights to save endangered cockatoos

Some biosphere reserves also are under pressure from environmental degradation.

In Nigeria, for example, habitat for a dwindling population of critically endangered African forest elephants is under threat as cocoa farmers expand into Omo Forest Reserve, a protected rainforest and one of Africa’s oldest and largest UNESCO Biosphere Reserves. The forest is also important to help combat climate change.

The Trump administration in July announced that the US would withdraw from UNESCO as of December 2026, just as it did during his first administration, saying US involvement is not in the national interest. The US has 47 biosphere reserves, most in federal protected areas.

(FRANCE 24 with AP)