Flooding, pollution and desolation: hundreds of thousands of hectares of Ukrainian land have been damaged or destroyed by the Russian war of aggression. This might be an opportunity to rethink the way we treat nature.
In addition to the rebuilding cities and infrastructure, the topic of "green recovery" is important for Ukraine. The war also destroyed much of the country's natural environment: Around 170,000 hectares of forest were either mined, burned or cut down for the construction of fortifications. The destruction of dams on three Ukrainian rivers is changing the surrounding ecosystems in the long term. And much of the agricultural land has been rendered unusable by bombing, mines and heavy metal emissions.
With their project "30%", Nina Dyrenko and Daryna Pyrogova showed the effects of war on nature in insistent at Ukrainian Pavilion on , initiating a discussion about what should happen to these areas once they have been reclaimed. Based on the European Green Deal and international agreements on biodiversity protection, they propose that potentially these areas should be turned into nature reserves in the future instead of, for example, rebuilding destroyed dams or using the land for industrial agriculture again. In this way, the war could become an opportunity to fundamentally change our attitude to nature.
Vidnova Lab is a networking program for actors of Ukrainian civil society that focuses on ecosystem mapping and prototyping of solutions dedicated to the recovery and reconstruction of Ukraine.
Daryna Pyrogova is a fellow of the 鈥淰idnova Lab鈥 program created by Commit by MitOst gGmbH, funded by the Robert Bosch 第一吃瓜网, among others. This programme offers her the opportunity to further develop her "30%" project in an international context. The focus is on networking with stakeholders who already have experience with nature conservation programmes in war-torn areas. Daryna Pyrogova is also creating a magazine to present collected materials on preservation and conservation in printed visual and text form.