FYI for you CBD folks. While it's a glass half full development, realistic 
valuation protocols could substantially bolster one of the most critical 
elements of the CBD, the need for cross-sectoral corodiantion and 
implementation of the treaty's mandates. wil

Dr. Wil Burns, Editor-in-Chief
Journal of International Wildlife Law & Policy
2875 Shasta Road
Berkeley, CA 94708 USA
Ph:   650.281.9126
Fax: 510.473.3731
[email protected]
Journal home page: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/13880292.asp
SSRN site (selected publications): http://ssrn.com/author=240348 Skype ID: 
Wil.Burns

Teaching Climate Law & Policy Blog: http://www.teachingclimatelaw.org



The EU Biodiversity Strategy to 2020 was adopted yesterday by the European 
Commission and is available, with supplementary documents, at the following 
Europa site: 

 http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/biodiversity/comm2006/2020.htm
[1] 

It is one of the first biodiversity strategies launched since CoP10 which 
claims to be "Nagoya-compliant" although it contains only 6 major targets, not 
the 20 Aichi Targets of the Nagoya Strategic Plan for Biodiversity.

As the preamble to the strategy says - implementing the strategy will be an 
"enormous challenge".

Best wishes

David Duthie

 

PS - the online version of the earlier press release pasted below contains many 
interesting hyperlinks on the past 5-6 years of european biodiversity policy.

************

EU biodiversity strategy to account for value of nature [fr [2]]

http://www.euractiv.com/en/sustainability/eu-biodiversity-strategy-account-value-nature-news-504312
[3] 

  

Published: 29 April 2011 

The EU's 2020 biodiversity strategy, to be presented next week, will pave the 
way for the value of nature to be taken into account across all policies, 
including factoring the environment and ecosystems into national economic 
plans. 

 Background 

The EU's 2006 biodiversity communication and action plan [4] set out a detailed 
agenda for action to halt the loss of biodiversity by 2010, but the bloc did 
not even come close [5] to achieving its target. 

A January 2010 Commission communication outlined policy options [6] for EU's 
post-2010 biodiversity strategy. 

In March 2010, the Council set a new EU target [7] for the protection of 
biodiversity by 2020: to halt the loss of biodiversity and the decline of 
ecosystem services by 2020, restore such services as far as is feasible, and 
step up the EU's contribution to safeguarding global biodiversity. 

In October 2010, during international negotiations on a new global
post-2010 biodiversity vision and target in Japan, EU countries adopted the 
so-called Aichii targets [8] and agreed that "by 2020 at the latest, 
biodiversity values will have been integrated into national and local 
development and poverty reduction strategies and planning processes and will 
have been incorporated into national accounting, as appropriate, and reporting 
systems". 

"There is a need for economic valuation of the benefits and costs of protecting 
biodiversity in order to make progress, and better guide and orient 
policymaking, while being aware that not everything can be valued in monetary 
terms," said François Wakenhut, head of the European Commission's biodiversity 
unit, speaking earlier this month at an EVENT [9] in the European Parliament. 

The EU's new biodiversity strategy, to be unveiled next Wednesday (4 May), will 
consider measuring Europe's natural capital and integrating the value of 
ecosystem services into policymaking. 

The strategy follows work by the EU executive's in-house research facility, the 
Joint Research Centre, on mapping ecosystem services at EU level, the FIRST 
DRAFT [10] of which - known as "the atlas of ecosystem services" - was 
published in March. 

It also follows work carried out by the European Environment Agency (EEA) on 
ecosystem services accounting in Europe. 

The EEA's June 2010 BASELINE FOR EUROPEAN BIODIVERSITY [11] showed that the 
majority of ecosystem services are no longer able to deliver the optimal 
quality and quantity of basic services, such as crop pollination, clean air and 
water, and control of floods or erosion. 

Wakenhut underlined the importance of the baseline study in helping 
policymakers to get the starting point of EU biodiversity strategy exactly 
right, as "we need to be able to measure what we're managing". 

GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE 

The centrepiece of the EU's current nature and biodiversity policy is the 
NATURA 2000 [12] network of protected areas, which today represent 18% of the 
bloc's land mass. 

However, according to the EU executive, the future ecosystem services cannot 
only be delivered only through such protected areas, and the remaining 82% will 
need to be addressed as well. Therefore, investment in natural capital, which 
the Commission refers to as "green infrastructure,"
is needed, Wakenhut said. 

"The infrastructure administration will be a key element of our future 
biodiversity strategy," he added, stressing the need to invest in solutions 
that rely on enhanced ecosystem services and recognise "the cost-effective 
potential offered by the green infrastructure system approach". 

As an example he highlighted the Danube river flood mitigation scheme, which 
cost €180 million to implement compared to the €400 million cost of 2005's 
floods and damage. 

The Commission is set to table a green infrastructure initiative in late 2011. 

According to the EU executive, investing in natural capital also includes 
opportunities for the "restoration" of ecosystems. While such a "positive"
biodiversity agenda has been underdeveloped in recent years, the Commission 
stresses that there is a wealth of evidence of its high cost-benefit ratio.


ECONOMICS IN SUPPORT OF BIODIVERSITY 

While Payments for Ecosystem Services (PES) in the EU have so far primarily 
been harnessed by public funding – green schemes in the bloc's Common 
Agricultural Policy (CAP) being one example - the EU executive now plans to  
further develop this economic incentive system to include both public and 
private payments in order to maximise their potential. 

Payments for Ecosystem Services are made by the beneficiaries of ecosystem 
services to natural resource managers in return for their adoption of 
sustainable practices that enhance or secure the provision of services. 

The Commission also plans to fully examine the scope for expanding the PES 
concept in the context of green infrastructure investments. 

Current EU tools for the restoration of environmental damage and compensation 
for damage include the ENVIRONMENTAL LIABILITY DIRECTIVE [13] and Article 6.4 
of the HABITATS DIRECTIVE [14]. 

But Wakenhut stressed that "we need to go beyond" such tools and consider 
habitat banking as a possible way forward for development projects - in 
particular in areas which are not yet protected by biodiversity-related 
legislation already. 

Cooperation with the European Investment Bank is also envisaged to attract 
funding from the private sector. 

GLOBAL COMMITMENT 

The EU's biodiversity strategy will also be in line with commitments made at UN 
global biodiversity talks in Nagoya last autumn. 

There, some 200 countries together agreed to deliver on the 20 SO-CALLED 
'AICHII BIODIVERSITY TARGETS' [15], which include integration of biodiversity 
values into national and local policy strategies (target 2) as well as 
eliminating subsidies harmful to the environment and developing positive 
incentives for conservation (target 3) instead. 

Referring to the second target, Wakenhut said "this may not seem to be a 
significant thing but I can tell you that it truly is". He added that the 
Commission and other participants had spent hours discussing the inclusion of 
ecosystem values in accounting systems, as they faced a lot of resistance from 
China and India throughout the negotiations. 

The official acknowledged that the inclusion of ecosystem values into national 
accounts would require a tremendous effort.  

But "we are now on the way to including those values in our accounting systems" 
– a process which "owes much" to TEEB's achievements and "authoritative 
conclusions" on the matter in recent years, he added.   

The 'Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity' (TEEB) project is part of the 
UN'S GREEN ECONOMY INITIATIVE [16].  

Along the lines of the UK's Stern Review on the ECONOMICS OF CLIMATE CHANGE 
[17], the initiative has made massive calculations in an attempt to put a price 
on nature services. By demonstrating the economic value of soil, forest or 
fresh water it is hoped that policymakers can be convinced to implement the 
'polluter pays' principle to protect nature. 

As one should never waste a good crisis, Wakenhut argued that TEEB provides 
"very useful ammunition to prepare a response to the [financial and economic] 
crisis that will be truly sustainable". 

As for the global dimension of green economic incentives, the main financing 
mechanisms are currently being discussed in the context of following up on 
October 2010's UN biodiversity conference and "will be one of the main clusters 
of work discussed next year in Delhi," he said. 

  More on this topic 

News:Commission presents 'options' for 2020 biodiversity targets [18] 

News:UN nature panel to be launched in autumn [19] 

News:Nature 'services' undervalued, EU report finds [20] 



Links:
------
[1] http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/biodiversity/comm2006/2020.htm
[2]
http://www.euractiv.com/fr/developpement-durable/la-strat-gie-de-lue-sur-la-biodiversit-fendra-la-valeur-de-la-nature-news-5043
[3]
http://www.euractiv.com/en/sustainability/eu-biodiversity-strategy-account-value-nature-news-504312
[4]
http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/biodiversity/comm2006/bap_2006.htm
[5]
http://www.euractiv.com/climate-environment/eu-admits-failure-protect-biodiversity/article-178143
[6]
http://www.euractiv.com/sustainability/commission-presents-options-2020-biodiversity-targets/article-189001
[7]
http://consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressData/en/envir/113373.pdf
[8] http://www.cbd.int/sp/targets/
[9] http://www.ebcd.org/website%2011/TEEB/Agenda%20TEEB.pdf
[10]
http://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/111111111/16103
[11] http://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/eu-2010-biodiversity-baseline/
[12] http://ec.europa.eu/environment/nature/natura2000/index_en.htm
[13]
http://www.euractiv.com/en/climate-environment/environmental-liability-applying-polluter-pays-principle-linksdossier-499899
[14]
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CONSLEG:1992L0043:20070101:EN:PDF
[15] http://www.cbd.int/sp/targets/
[16] http://www.unep.org/greeneconomy/
[17]
http://www.euractiv.com/climate-change/economics-climate-change/article-161678
[18]
http://www.euractiv.com/en/sustainability/commission-presents-options-2020-biodiversity-targets/article-189001
[19]
http://www.euractiv.com/en/sustainability/un-nature-panel-launched-autumn-news-503565
[20]
http://www.euractiv.com/en/climate-environment/nature-services-undervalued-eu-report-finds/article-187309



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