China News Agency, Beijing, July 8th (Reporter Huang Yuqin) Aiming at the wild population of China's giant pandas reaching more than 1,800, the threat level has been reduced from endangered to vulnerable, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin at a regular press conference on the 8th Said that China's "environmental protection story" is brilliant, and we are willing to continue to work with all parties to protect our home earth on which we depend for survival.

  "This is undoubtedly good news." Wang Wenbin said when talking about the decline of wild pandas from endangered to vulnerable. In recent years, China's "environmental protection stories" have been brilliant.

The survival conditions of rare and endangered species such as wild giant pandas, Tibetan antelopes and elk have been improved, and mysterious animals such as desert cats and brown-necked hornbills have reappeared.

Siberian tigers entered the village, Asian elephants moved north, and whales reappeared in Dapeng Bay.

In today's China, the concept of "green water and green mountains are golden mountains and silver mountains" has long been deeply rooted in the hearts of the people, and "respect for nature, conform to nature, and protect nature" is becoming a conscious code of conduct for governments at all levels and the general public.

  Wang Wenbin said that the ecological environment is related to the well-being of people of all countries, and ecological protection is inseparable from international cooperation.

As a participant, contributor, and leader in the construction of global ecological civilization, China firmly practices multilateralism and strives to promote the construction of a fair, reasonable, and win-win global environmental governance system.

The 2021 Guiyang International Forum on Ecological Civilization with the theme of "Low Carbon Transformation and Green Development-Building a Community of Human and Natural Life" will be held this month.

China will also host the 15th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity in October.

"We are willing to continue to work with all parties to continuously strengthen international cooperation in ecological protection and environmental governance, and jointly protect the earth on which we depend for survival." (End)