Title: Key Issues for South Africa
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2Key Issues for South Africa
- Post 2010 Strategic Plan, Targets and financial
mechanism - Programmes of work for implementation
- International Regime on Access and
Benefit-sharing (Draft Protocol) - Intergovernmental Science-PolicyPlatform for
Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services - Conference of the Parties serving as a Meeting of
the Parties (COP/MOP5) of the Cartagena Protocol
on Biosafety Supplementary Protocol on
Liability Redress
3 Context
Economics
Social
Shared Concerns
Policy Legal Responses
Biodiversity Conservation
Livelihoods
Influence
Ecological
Threats
International Agreements
Poverty inequity
Trade
Knowledge
Development
Landscape Ecosystem Species Genetic
Sovereignty
4Background
- CBD is one of the three Conventions from 1992
Rio Summit on Environment Development - CBDs objectives are conservation, sustainable
use, and fair equitable sharing of benefits - South Africa is the 3rd most mega-diverse country
in the world. - Biodiversity underpins ecosystem functioning
provision of ecosystem services for human
well-being (food, health, clean air, livelihoods,
poverty reduction and attainment of MDGs). - Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety
- safe transfer, handling and use of living
modified organisms (LMOs) - mitigation of adverse effects on the conservation
sustainable use of biodiversity, taking into
account human health.
5Strategic Importance to South Africa
- South Africa is the 3rd most mega-diverse country
in the world. - This is largely due to its species diversity and
the endemism of its vegetation. - Sustainable utilisation of natural
resources-Consumptive and non-consumptive use. - Thus, South Africas participation in the
deliberations at the Conference of Parties is
invaluable.
6 Global Context
- 2010 target of halting biodiversity loss not been
met globally. - Scientific consensus project continuing
extinctions and loss of habitats and ecosystem
goods and services throughout this century. - Drastic consequences to human societies
especially the poor as numerous thresholds or
tipping points are crossed. - Biodiversity is inseparable from poverty, health,
livelihoods, food security, and climate change. - Global Obstacles limited financial, human and
technical resources fragmented decision making
lack of access to scientific information and
lack of economic valuation of biodiversity. - Urgent action needed to reverse current trends
- South Africa doing relatively well in
implementing the broad CBD objectives
7- The Red List Index (RLI) for all these species
groups is decreasing. - Coral species are moving most rapidly towards
greater extinction risk -
- Amphibians are, on average, the group most
threatened.
Source IUCN
8but large areas still under-represented
Source UNEP-WCMC
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15Post 2010 Strategic PlanVision Mission
- Shared Vision, Mission, Goals Targets,
Framework for regional national targets, - Enhance coherence in the implementation of CBD
decisions, Programmes of work Global Strategy
for Plant conservation - Vision-Living in Harmony with Nature where By
2050 biodiversity (our natural capital) is
valued, conserved, restored and wisely used ,
sustaining a healthy planet and delivering
benefits essential for all people . - Mission
- Take effective and urgent action to halt
biodiversity loss - Contribution to human well-being and poverty
eradication - Securing planets variety of life
- Reduction of pressures on biodiversity
- Avoiding tipping points
- Sustainable use of biological resources
- Restoration of ecosystems and services they
provide - Sharing of the benefits of biodiversity equitably
- Mainstreaming biodiversity issues
16Post 2010 Strategic Plan Goals
- Address underlying causes by mainstreaming
- (awareness, integration into strategies
planning processes, incentives, sustainable
production consumption) - Reduce direct pressures promote sustainable use
- (degradation, pollution, AIS, fragmentation of
habitats, coral reefs, impact on vulnerable
ecosystems and overexploitation addressed) - Safeguard ecosystems, species and genetic
diversity - (conserve terrestrial, marine, coastal aquatic
ecosystems through protected areas, extinction
and agro-biodiversity) - Enhance benefits
- (livelihoods and wellbeing, restoration, fair
access) - Implementation- participatory planning, knowledge
and capacity building - (Update NBSAP, TK, science base for status and
trends capacity)
17Post 2010 Strategic Plan Goals
- Implementation, Review, Monitoring Evaluation
- NBSAPs,
- Programmes of work
- Legislation and national policies,
- Partnership- ownership and mainstreaming, private
sector, civil society, research institutions - National reports- SBSTTA, WIGRI, COPs
- Support mechanisms
- Capacity building- Financial, local communities,
technical - Clearing-house mechanism and technology transfer-
biodiversity knowledge network, database and
network of practitioners, good practice, tools
and guidance, effective websites, information
exchange - Partnerships and initiatives
- Support mechanisms for research, monitoring
assessment
18Issues to be discussed at COP10
- COP10 will take place in Nagoya, Japan, from
18-29 Oct 2010. - The agenda of the meeting has been developed by
the CBD Secretariat in accordance with the Rules
of Procedure. - COP10 will consider the following among other
issues - The International Regime on ABS and its adoption
- Post 2010 Strategic Plan,
- Multiyear programme of work-progress reviews
monitoring, efficiency - Communication, education public awareness and
IYB - Cooperation MEAs, South-South, Cities and
Biodiversity - Issues for in-depth Consideration
- Mountain biodiversity- assessment, TK, Use,
land-use, impact management, rehab, connectivity,
cooperation - Inland waters biodiversity- MDGs, Wetlands, IWRM,
rehabilitation, connectivity, Agric, urban
authorities, reduction of vulnerability, - Marine coastal biodiversity- assessments,
climate change, Ocean fertilisation,
Acidification, unsustainable human activities,
marine and coastal protected areas, unsustainable
fishing, research
19Issues to be discussed at COP10
- Protected areas- Ecological networks, Ramsar
Convention on Wetlands, Management effectiveness,
Marine and Inland water protected areas,
Management of alien Invasive, - Biodiversity climate change-Role of
biodiversity Ecosystems - Sustainable use
- Agricultural biodiversity
- Biodiversity of dry and sub-humid lands
- Forest biodiversity
- Biofuels and biodiversity- precautionary approach
biotechnology science - Invasive alien species- control, monitoring
assessment. - Global Taxonomy Initiative- Classification,
distribution mapping -
20The international regime on access and benefit
sharing under the Convention on Biological
Diversity
21PURPOSE OF DRAFT PROTOCOL (IR-ABS)
- To give effect to 3rd objective and ABS
provisions of the CBD - To promote and safeguard the fair and equitable
sharing of benefits arising from the utilization
of genetic resources (GR) and associated
traditional knowledge (TK) - Core issues under discussion pertain to
- Nature Objective Scope Access, Technology
transfer Disclosure requirements, Compliance,
Transboundary cooperation Traditional knowledge,
and Capacity building/development - South Africa is in favour of a legally-binding
regime (a Protocol) to give effect to the third
objective of the CBD. - This will ensure the fair and equitable sharing
of benefits arising from the utilization of
genetic resources and associated traditional
knowledge. - Ongoing negotiations towards a possible regime
22Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity
and Ecosystem Services for the conservation and
sustainable use of biodiversity, long-term human
well-being and sustainable development
23Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and
Ecosystem Services
- IPBES establishment agreed in June 2010 under
the auspices of UNEP. - IPBES is aimed at strengthening the
science-policy interface for biodiversity and
ecosystem at global, regional, sub-regional
level. - Enhancing cooperation with relevant UN bodies and
building capacity to mainstream biodiversity and
ecosystem services - It will conduct scientifically credible,
independent and peer reviewed assessments(science
for policy decision making) - It will catalyse efforts to generate new
knowledge, perform regular and timely assessments
of knowledge, ID policy-relevant tools and
methodologies to support policy formulation
implementation - The principles of establishing IBPES is shared
broadly, however some of the outstanding issues
need to be finalised. This platform as it will
enhance opportunities for scientifically sound
and policy-relevant information on biodiversity
and ecosystem services. It will focus on
government needs based on priorities established.
24IPBES Principles IUCNs role
- Collaboration with existing initiatives on
biodiversity and ecosystem services, - Scientific independence, credibility, relevance
and legitimacy - Contribution of indigenous and local knowledge
- Provision of policy-relevant information
- Integration of capacity-building
- Interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary approach
incorporating relevant disciplines - Addressing terrestrial, marine and inland water
biodiversity and ecosystem services - Assessments, trends analysis, Information
generation and dissemination, technological
sharing, capacity building
25CARTAGENA PROTOCOL ON BIOSAFETY
-SUPPLEMENTARY PROTOCOL ON LIABILITY AND REDRESS
FOR DAMAGE FOR LMOs
26CARTAGENA PROTOCOL ON BIOSAFETY -SUPPLEMENTARY
PROTOCOL ON LIABILITY AND REDRESS FOR DAMAGE FOR
LMOs
- The fifth meeting of the Conference of the
Parties serving as a Meeting of the Parties
(COP/MOP5) of the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety
taking place in Nagoya, Japan from 11-15 Oct
2010. - Objectives of Catagena Protocol on Biosafety
- ensure protection in safe transfer, handling and
use of LMOs from biotechnology - those with potential adverse effects on
conservation and sustainable use - taking also into account risks to human health,
- specifically focusing on transboundary movements
- COP/MOP5 will deliberate on
- Transboundary movement of GMOs
- Supplementary Protocol on Liability and Redress
for Damage from GMOs. - Provides administrative system response to
damage/impact on conservation and sustainable use
of biodiversity resulting from transboundary
movement of LMOs. - International rules and procedures for liability
and redress -
27CARTAGENA PROTOCOL ON BIOSAFETY -SUPPLEMENTARY
PROTOCOL ON LIABILITY AND REDRESS FOR DAMAGE FOR
LMOs
- South Africa is Party to the Cartagena Protocol
on Biosafety- adopted by CBD as supplementary
agreement - South Africa- effective and functional biosafety
system, regulates through GMO Act NEMA
NEMBA - 2007 to date- negotiations on Liability and
Redress regime protracted contentious - Draft supplementary protocol developed some
outstanding matters - Risk assessment management, and Redress
28 Context
Economics
Social
Shared Concerns
Policy Legal Responses
Biodiversity Conservation
Livelihoods
Influence
Ecological
Threats
International Agreements
Poverty inequity
Trade
Knowledge
Development
Landscape Ecosystem Species Genetic
Sovereignty
29Thank You!