Title: Overview of Ongoing MA Followup Activities
1Overview of Ongoing MA Follow-up Activities
Presented by Dr. Bradnee Chambers, UNU-IAS
2Outline
- I. Scientific Research
- II. Sub-global Assessments
- III. Policy Implementation and Decision-making
- Outreach and Education
- Conclusions
3I. Scientific Research
- Establishment of ICSU-UNU-UNESCO Ad Hoc Group
2006 - Two meetings held Paris, December 06
Montreal, July 07, Third meeting Dec 07 - Focus on data and knowledge gaps
supporting/promoting improved collection and use
of primary data on ecosystem services. - Prioritize Research Areas
- Suggest Ways/Mechanisms Research can be further
developed and implemented
4I. Scientific Research
- Likely two products
- Full Length Report for ICSU-UNU-UNESCO Ad Hoc
Group to use to engage wider scientific community
- Smaller piece for Analytical piece for Science
- Areas of focus so far
- Strengthening the understanding Biodiversity and
Ecosystem Services - Strengthening Economic Evaluation of Ecosystem
Services - Quantifying Links between Ecosystem Services and
HWB - Modeling and Scenarios
- Data gaps and Monitoring Needs
- Institutions (Unraveling Poverty Ecosystem
Service linkage, scales and responses to
direct/indirect drivers)
5I. Scientific Research
- Other Scientific Activities
- Article on post-MA research needs published by
Carpenter et al. in Science, 13 Oct 2006. - MIMES (Multiscale Integrated Models of Ecosystem
Services) developing models on economic value of
tradeoffs ES. - US LTER and the Natural Capital Project.
- UK NERC 5-year Ecosystem Services and Poverty
Alleviation (ESPA) research . - Other Assessments (i.e. GEO4, Global Marine
Assessment, AG-Assessment etc)
6II. Sub-global Assessments
- 35 SGAs initiated under MA
- Many still underway though technical support
ceased - 13 completed
- some may never finish?
- Emergence of new SGAs
- 9 new Assessments underway
- Recognised that ongoing support of SGAs is a key
aspect of the MA follow-up.
7Scale Scope of SGAs
- Scales range from local/community based systems
to national level - Most assessments focus on work at smaller scales,
with approximately 40 of SGAs including work at
the local/community level, 25 focused on the
sub-national level. - Regional-level work also seemed to be fairly
common (approximately 16) - Generally, inland water, forest and woodland, and
cultivated lands seem to be the ecosystem types
most widely covered, closely followed by
marine/coastal systems and mountainous systems.
8- Contact re-established with SGAs in October
06\Questionnaire sent to all SGAs - Responses highlighted many issues and needs
- Constraints in funding, data/information
availability, capacity, institutional and
governance arrangements, - Lack of follow-up,
- Lack of expertise in use of and access to tools,
- Most focus on one scale, and
- Little contact among SGAs since end of MA.
9Strategy for follow-up to MA SGAs
- Harmonise and synergise efforts and initiatives,
- Catalyse new assessment work,
- Mobilise resources and capacity.
- Note a Secretariat at UNU-IAS has been
formulized full-time person hired
10Framework for MA Follow-up Links Between Global
and Sub-global
Policy Implementation
Outreach Dissemination of findings
Knowledge Base
11III. Policy Implementation Decision-making
- Direct Initiatives
- CBD MA decisions
- Use MA as basis in future work, Urged GEF
funding, Assessment impact COP9. - SBSTTA Decision non-papers underway (UNU-UNEP)
- Other MEAs?
- UNDP-UNEP Poverty Environment Initiative
- Use MA as basis to incorporate Ecosystem Services
into national PRS (Kenya, Mali, Mauritania,
Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda), pilot
workshop how-to-do Integrated Assessment)
12III. Policy Implementation Decision-making
- Direct Initiatives
- UK House of Commons MA Report
- Environmental Audit Committee called on UK
Government to - galvanize further international action in
relation on MA follow-up - support for a Millennium Ecosystem Fund
- initiate more SGAs
13Quotes UK House of Commons MA Report
- MA provides a framework for the successful
bringing together of development, environment and
economic policies, we are disappointed that
governments and development agencies have been
slow to grasp the importance of the MA and MDG7 - We are frankly disappointed that development
NGOs have failed to engage more with the MA
findings. Although we understand that these NGOs
might focus on the immediate problems associated
with poverty, such as access to clean water,
their failure in the long term also to focus on
the need to maintain ecosystem services will
ultimately unravel their efforts. - The MA showed that degradation of ecosystem
services is a threat to businesses bottom line. - Due to the serious conclusions drawn from the MA
we call for urgent, concerted, research at all
levels to fill the knowledge gaps identified.
14III. Policy Implementation Decision-making
- Direct Initiatives
- Numerous WRI Initiatives
- Guide to Mainstreaming MA in public
decision-making - Ecosystem Service Review Methodology for Business
- Evaluation system to determine dependence and
impact on ecosystem services and business risks
and opportunities. - Others (Poverty Ecosystem Service mapping tool,
Coral Reef ecosystem service evaluation tool,
Mainstreaming MA in Multilateral Development
Banks etc). - Action agenda for business (17 expert papers on
recommendations to implement MA findings)
15Search for problems faced by Nissan
Impact Assessment on Ecosystem Services NISSAN
We will try to assess which our activities using
MA Framework.
Indirect drivers of change
Human well-being and poverty reduction
Nissans activities
Problems faced by Nissan
Problems produced by Nissan
Water resources
Direct drivers of change
Ecosystem service
Habitat change Climate change Invasive
species Overexploitation Pollution
Biodiversity conservation - Ecosystem -
Species - Genetic
LIFE ON EARTH - BIODIVERSITY
Strategies and intervention
16III. Policy Implementation Decision-making
- Other MA Related Activities
- World Bank projects
- Proposed US Commission on Global Resources,
Environment, and Security (introduction of draft
Bill by Senator Sarbanes based on MA) - Natural Capital Project (Integrated Valuation of
Ecosystem Services and Tradeoffs (InVEST)
(Standford U., The Nature Conservatory and WWF)
17IV. Outreach and Education
- Paper on controversy over ecosystem services
discourse in Ramsar Convention UNCCD
deliberations. - MA Biodiversity Synthesis being used in graduate
course at Kyoto University, Japan. - Findings of MA used as main focus for UNU Global
Seminar in Kanazawa, Japan in November 06. - MA Conceptual Framework used for undergraduate
course at Keio University, Japan. - MA report on reading list for undergraduate
course at McGill University, Canada and at GRIPS,
Japan.
18V. Conclusions
- Lots activities, but picture of total MA
follow-up and impact remains blurry - CBD COP9 will offer a good chance to see more
clearly (arising from SBTTA) - Paper on impacts of the MA national impacts is
now getting underway - Need for overall coordination, caretaker funding
and follow-up important.
19Thank You