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International Plant Protection Convention and relationship to the CBD

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Title: International Plant Protection Convention and relationship to the CBD


1
International Plant Protection Convention and
relationship to the CBD
  • Secretariat of the
  • International Plant Protection Convention
  • FAO Rome, ITALY

2
IPPC MANDATE and the need for taxonomic support
  • Purposeto protect plant life and health from the
    introduction and spread of pests
  • cultivated and wild flora and forests
  • pests include arthropods, diseases or weeds

3
IPPC MANDATE and the need for taxonomic support
Plant Protection
TAXONOMY
SCIENTIFIC SUPPORT
REGULATORY
LEGISLATION
4
Current Activities
  • Implementation of the Cartagena Protocol on
    Biosafety
  • Decided by COP in 1995, completed in January 2000
  • Based on provisions of Art 19 and Art 8
  • Alien species (Art 8h)
  • Guiding Principles
  • Mode for implementation

5
CBD Article 8h
  • Prevent the introduction of, control or eradicate
    those alien species which threaten ecosystems,
    habitats, or species

6
Relationship to the IPPC
  • GMOs (LMOs) to the extent that such organisms may
    be considered plant pests
  • Biosafety as it involves pest risk analysis,
    biocontrol, and the application of phytosanitary
    measures
  • Alien invasive species to the extent that these
    include pests of plants and plant products

7
IPPC Initiatives
  • Secretariat Secretariat contact since 1995 with
    direct participation by IPPC in SBSTTA since 1997
  • Issues raised with ICPM in 1999
  • Exploratory Open-ended WG in June 2000

8
Results of the EOEWG
  • Overlap of scope with CBD as the IPPC applies to
    the protection of natural flora
  • IPPC has useful experience and structures for
    implementation
  • LMOs fulfilling the criteria for pests fall
    within the scope of the IPPC

9
Results (cont.)
  • ISPMs needed on PRA for LMOs
  • Secretariat cooperation with CBD
  • Formalize observer status
  • Exchange information
  • Clarify terms
  • Make the role of the IPPC in relation to alien
    invasive species more explicit

10
Activities
  • Analysis of draft guiding principles
  • Attend GISP meetings where possible
  • Preparation of ICPM inputs for SBSTTA
  • Identify possible ICPM work programme
  • Intergovernmental Technical Consultation
  • Attend SBSTTA and COP meetings
  • Report to Interim Commission on Phytosanitary
    Measures

11
Current activities
  • International Standards
  • Environmental risks (adopted)
  • Economic impacts (adopted)
  • Pest risk analysis for LMOs (drafted)
  • Memorandum of Understanding between IPPC and CBD
  • Joint Secretariat meetings

12
Future possibilities
  • Harmonization of terminology
  • Mutual development of risk analysis methodologies
  • Revision and addition of ISPMs taking into
    account environmental concerns
  • Joint information exchange

13
Challenges
  • Consultation in capitals --cooperation at the
    national level
  • Raising the profile of the IPPC
  • Adding explicit environmentally-recognized text
    and concepts to ISPMs
  • Fostering cooperation toward harmonization
  • Avoiding conflicting obligations
  • Facilitating mutual implementation

14
Other Players
  • Scientific Committee on Problems of the
    Environment SCOPE
  • GISP Global Invasive Species Programme
  • World Conservation Union IUCN
  • Other INGOs

15
Identifying the needs.
  • Development of the Phytosanitary Capacity
    Evaluation
  • http//icpm.massey.ac.nz
  • Assessment of taxonomic services is a key
    component of the evaluation

16
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17
PCE
  • Intended to be used by governments to formulate
    their own action plans
  • More realistic judgements on the types of TA
    needed
  • Decisions, plans and outputs of capacity building
    are owned by the recipient

18
Partnerships
IPPC
19
IPPC Secretariat
  • IPPC Secretariat
  • FAO Plant Protection Service
  • Viale delle Terme di Caracalla
  • Rome ITALY 00100
  • http//www.ippc.int
  • email ippc_at_fao.org
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