GETS AND TIMELINES NEEDED FOR AFRICA’S NEW SUSTAINABILITY ROADMAP


Environmental Panorama
International
November of 2008


03 Nov 2008 - Brazzaville, Republic of Congo: More protected areas, respect for indigenous populations, the sharing of benefits and greater care for forests were all features of a broad sustainability action plan outlined last week by African nations.

Ten African leaders, over 100 delegates from Congo Basin countries and beyond, NGOs and multilateral agencies were attending the 6th World Forum for Sustainable Development in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo.

The action plan was designed to confront the effects of globalization, the food crisis and the current financial crisis in the face of increasing climate change.

A statement from WWF said: “WWF salutes the resolve of African countries to create more national and trans-national protected areas; to respect traditions and cultures as well as the integration of indigenous populations in the management of natural resources; to ensure equitable sharing of benefits derived from natural resources exploitation; and to promote the creation of community forests and sustainable exploitation of non-timber forest products.”

WWF also called for the adoption of measurable targets and timelines on issues identified in the action plan. This includes giving specific attention to the issue of illegal logging, wanton mining and the ever-increasing trade in bushmeat and ivory, all drivers of poor economic returns, extensive loss of natural resources and a menace to global climate.

“The call for the creation of an African Sustainable Development Fund by African leaders at the forum is a good one,” said Andre Kamdem, Head of the WWF Green Heart of Africa Initiative.

“The Congo Basin, at this critical time in its history, needs concrete agreement and action in order to preserve its biodiversity and reap full benefits therefrom.”

Delegates at the meeting pushed for significant progress on opportunities for infrastructure financing as a basis for sustainable development; economic valuation of natural resources; more equal access to scientific and technological solutions; best practices in agriculture; and the reform of governance. The forum also focused on proposing ways to shield sub-Saharan African countries from the world economic crisis.

WWF issued a statement at the beginning of the forum calling on African nations to turn the demand for their natural resources currently driving deforestation and other destruction into a force for higher returns from sustainable development.

“WWF welcomes the resolve of the forum to support ongoing initiatives such as giving more impetus to the convergence plan of the Commission for Central African Forests (COMIFAC) and the integration of environmental considerations into poverty reduction strategies,” said Kamdem.

“We are also pleased with the action plan of regional cooperation in environmental management as well as the commitment to support sustainable forest management, certification and the FLEGT [Forest Law Enforcement, Governance and Trade] process.”

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A million tonnes of North Sea fish discarded every year

04 Nov 2008 - Frankfurt, Germany: A million tonnes of fish and other sea creatures caught in the North Sea are thrown overboard every year, according to a new report from WWF-Germany.

The study, “Sea Creatures Are Not Rubbish”, shows that one-third of North Sea catch is discarded and calls for a gradual ban on the practice of discarding in the European Union.

This practice occurs when boats decide to dispose of fish which they catch but cannot land or derive income from, or when they have caught more fish than they are allowed to land, or they discard the less valuable fish in order to make more space for more valuable fish.

For example, the report cites the situation with Dover sole, for which six kilos of sea creatures are caught incidentally and discarded for every kilo found in the fishmonger. Similarly, catching one kilo of Norwegian lobster or scampi results in five kilos of bycatch.

The European Union recently declared that 88 per cent of the fisheries stocks of the EU are overfished, compared with 25 per cent on average globally. Bycatch is a major contributor to overfishing, providing even more impetus to address this unsustainable and illogical practice

Every year several million sharks and up to 250,000 sea turtles are killed in fishing operations designed to catch other species. This hidden fishing impact is already known to have contributed to the catastrophic decline in species such as the Pacific Leatherback Turtle, believed to have less than 2,500 nesting females remaining.

"Bycatch is an incredible waste and one of the largest threats to many sea creatures,” said Karoline Schacht, Fisheries Policy Officer, WWF-Germany. "The drama happens far away at sea but this unseen wastefulness must come to an end.”

Of most concern are fish that are too small or for which the fishermen have no catch quota – meaning that there is little or no measurement of the number or volume of these fish caught and killed. This could indicate an even greater level of over-fishing than is currently recognized in official estimates.

In Scotland, some fish for which the quota may have been exceeded are still being caught as the boats target other fish in the same area. The economic impact of this is frightening: fish to the value of €60m was discarded in recent months - for example, cod which may have been caught over the official quotas. As the quotas exist to assist in recovering highly vulnerable cod populations, it is clear how bycatch and discarding constitutes a clear threat.

WWF is calling for a European-wide discard ban and a bycatch action package. In the future every fish caught should be landed and allocated to the catch quota.

At the same time fishermen should be obliged to use better catch technologies and in this way the bycatch in some fisheries could be reduced by up to 90 per cent.

A legislative initiative against discard practice, announced by the European Commission, was only recently torpedoed by the powerful fishery lobby of some member countries.

“That is an outright scandal,” said Schacht. “Behind closed doors is an attempt to prevent sustainable fisheries.”

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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