BAN KI-MOON STRESSES URGENT NEED TO REVERSE ALARMING RATE OF BIODIVERSITY LOSS


Environmental Panorama
International
September of 2010


27/09/2010
Department of Public Information / News and Media Division / UN General Assembly

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon implored world leaders last week to commit to reversing the alarming rate of biodiversity loss and rescuing the natural economy before it was too late.

Conserving the planet's species and habitat was not only central to sustainable development and the Millennium Development Goals, it also had the potential to generate annual economic gains worth trillions of dollars, he said during the opening of the General Assembly's high-level meeting as a contribution to the International Year of Biodiversity.

Allowing biodiversity to decline was like throwing money out the window, he continued. "We must stop thinking of environmental protection as a cost. It is an investment that goes hand in hand with the other investments that you, as Heads of State and Government, must make to consolidate economic growth and human well-being in your countries."

Warning that the 2010 deadline for substantially reducing the rate of biodiversity loss would not be met, Ban Ki-moon urged leaders to muster the political will to turn that goal into reality, as their legacy and "gift to generations to come". He also called on them to push forward the strategic plan on biodiversity and the 2050 biodiversity vision expected to be adopted at the Tenth Conference of Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity, to be held in Nagoya, Japan, next month.

He said that, together, those initiatives would address such pressing concerns as the need to set concrete national targets before Rio+20, monitoring and evaluation mechanisms, as well as access to and equitable sharing of the benefits derived from genetic resources. "It is a solid plan, on paper. But it will need leadership to bring it to life", he said, calling on ministers of the environment, finance and planning, economic production and transport, health and social welfare, to do their part.

Echoing the Secretary-General's concerns, General Assembly President Joseph Deiss expressed hope that the discussions would contribute to the negotiations in Japan by ensuring that the strategic plan and vision would be ambitious and feasible. The Millennium target on environmental protection, set out in the 2002 Johannesburg Plan of Implementation, to stop biodiversity loss had not been met, but it was heartening that the international community was mobilizing to address the threat and take steps to assess the economic value of ecosystems.

He recalled that, last June, the international community had agreed, at an ad hoc intergovernmental and multistakeholder meeting in Busan (Republic of Korea), to create the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) with the aim of closing the information gap separating scientists from policymakers on the question of biodiversity and ecosystems.

He said preserving biodiversity was inseparable from the fight against poverty and the struggle to improve health and security for the present and future generations. "Preserving biodiversity is not a luxury, it is a duty", he said, lamenting that worldwide human activity and climate change were destroying it, particularly in developing countries, with dire consequences for the world's poorest people.

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Parties to the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety prepare to hold their 5th meeting

30/09/2010
Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity / United Nations Environment Programme
Parties to the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety are preparing to hold their fifth ordinary meeting from 11 to 15 October 2010 in Aichi-Nagoya, Japan, at the Nagoya Congress Center (NCC). More than 3,000 delegates representing governments, civil society and industry are expected to attend.

At their five-day meeting, Parties are expected to adopt a Supplementary Protocol on Liability and Redress to the Cartagena Protocol, which will establish international rules and procedures for liability and redress in case of damage to biological diversity resulting from living modified organisms. It is also expected to adopt a 10-year strategic plan for the Protocol and a programme of work for the future meetings of the Parties to the Protocol.

A number of other important issues under the Protocol will also be discussed. These include: risk assessment and risk management of living modified organisms, public awareness and participation, capacity-building, the Biosafety Clearing-House, as well as handling, transport, packaging and identification of living modified organisms.

Cartagena Protocol

The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety is a supplementary agreement to the Convention on Biological Diversity. Its objective is to contribute to ensuring the safe transfer, handling and use of living modified organisms that may have adverse effects on conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity, taking also into account risks to human health.

The Protocol was adopted in Montreal on 29 January 2000 and entered into force on 11 September 2003. To date, 159 States and the European Union have ratified it.

The Protocol is named after the Colombian city of Cartagena where the final round of its negotiations was launched.

 
 

Source: Brazil - Ministry for the Environment
Press consultantship
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