Delegates from 193 nations have opened a UN meeting in Japan to discuss how to address Earth’s dramatic loss of animal and plant species.

The two-week Nagoya conference brings together parties to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity.

At its opening, Achim Steiner, head of the UN Environment Program, told delegates the meeting is “part of the world’s efforts to address a very simple fact — we are destroying life on Earth.”

A key task facing the 8,000 delegates is to hammer out a set of strategic goals to prevent the further loss of species over the next 10 years.

Experts, such as Jonathan Bailie, director of conservation programs at the Zoological Society of London, doubt the discussions will result in an ambitious, comprehensive international agreement featuring binding targets. But Bailie tells RFE/RL that he expects the talks to reveal a growing agreement among governments about the need to place a price on the goods and services that nature provides.

“Traditionally conservationists have focused on moral or ethical reasons as to why we want to save biodiversity,” Bailie says. “But it’s becoming increasingly apparent that if we don’t put a value on things, then often the wrong market decisions are made. For example, if trees are worth less standing than they are [worth] cut down, they will be cut down.”

Disappearing Species

The UN says the world has failed to reach the goal, set in 2002, of a “significant reduction” in species losses by 2010 — named as the International Year of Biodiversity.