Biodiversity policy international: CBD Access and Benefit Sharing Protocol
The official text of the Access and Benefit Sharing Protocol agreed at the CBD COP10 has now been published and is open for signature by parties for the next year.
The official text of the Access and Benefit Sharing Protocol agreed at the CBD COP10 has now been published and is open for signature by parties for the next year.
Formal reports from UN GA committee in early December that formally note and confirm agreements from COP10 of the CBD. One report on UNEP that includes IPBES; the second on CBD.
The official report of the 10th Conference of the Parties (COP10) of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) was produced on 19 December 2010 and is online with the various decisions and other documents from the COP in Nagoya in late October.
The Tenth Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) has now finished. A useful summary is available with detail from IISD. /.....
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But in brief, the COP achieved its three high level objectives:
The Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from Their Utilization was seen as being the crucial element of COP10, without which agreement on the Strategic Plan and other elements was at risk. Lots of very intense negotiations before and during COP10 resulted in agreement, but many of the parties clearly see this as less than ideal, and a significant step forward, rather than the desired state. There remain many different perspectives on some ABS issues.
However, the Protocol sets out a structured basis for access to genetic resources on the basis of prior informed consent and mutually agreed terms and aims to strike a balance of access with fair and equitable sharing of benefits. There was important inclusion of traditional knowledge as well. The detail on implementation will require a lot of work and commitment – both to ensure access and the realization of benefits. Entry into force is planned for 2012.
The Strategic Plan includes 20 headline targets under five strategic goals and its scope is biodiversity within the whole UN system. As it is framed, it looks hugely ambitious and will require an immense effort to reach success, given the difficulty in reaching the 2010 goals.
The Strategic Plan frames commitments for 2015 for:
and for 2020 for a range of other goals, including:
The resource mobilization strategy aims to ensure that finance will be in place to deliver the Strategic Plan – the idea is to define how this will work and set targets before COP11 in 2012. There was discussion, negotiation and some commitment from donors – the idea being that they should build biodiversity into their funding priorities for the future.
Other issues and agreements: decision effectively suspending geo-engineering; trying to persuade governments to use the precautionary principle on the release of synthetic life into the environment; affirmed the role of CBD in REDD+; adopted the Tkarihwaié:ri code of ethical conduct on "Respect for the Cultural and Intellectual Heritage ofIndigenous and Local Communities Relevant for the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Biological Diversity"; and agreed increased cooperation among the Rio Conventions before the Rio+20 Summit in 2012. The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) was discussed and COP10 encouraged the UN General Assembly to consider establishing the mechanism. Quite a number of other issues of agreement, including uncontroversial support for the Global Taxonomy Initiative and a UN Decade on Biodiversity.
HMG have put up a useful communication site on DirectGov - Nine days to Nagoya. Sounds like a film....
The European Envirionment Agency has issued a news highlight that makes a useful focus for EU positions, reports and trends, summarising the position in the lead into Nagoya.
Nagoya has kicked off - plenary and various other events are progressing. As expected, key interest in Access and Benefit Sharing, with informal working groups looking at present at compliance, checkpoints and other issues. For detailed reporting of the COP and side events, look at the IISD reporting services or the CBD website for COP10.
Nature has published a general news article (doi:10.1038/467764a) on the expectations for Nagoya