This Newsletter is being published on a quarterly basis pursuant to CBD decision IX/7. The aim of this e-Newsletter is to facilitate sharing of information on the application of the ecosystem approach and promote the use and voluntary update of the Ecosystem Approach Sourcebook. To subscribe, please visit http://www.cbd.int/. | ||||||||
Seeking Sustainable Economic Recovery through the application of the
Ecosystem Approach
In this issue, in order to further enhance our understanding on the international policy context relevant to the ecosystem approach, the UN Division for Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea (DOALOS) provides a brief on ecosystem approaches and oceans discussed at the UN General Assembly. | ||||||||
UNEP Ecosystem Management Programme – A new approach to sustainabilityThe UNEP Ecosystem Management Programme aims to transform sector-based environmental management into an ecosystem-based approach that integrates forests, land, freshwater, and coastal ecosystems where they impact upon the overall delivery of ecosystem services. The new programme is guided by five major interlinked elements: human well-being, indirect and direct drivers of change, ecosystem functioning and ecosystem services. As ecosystem services are interlinked and cannot be treated in isolation, UNEP promotes a holistic perspective for dealing with bundles of interlinked services to reverse their decline through improved ecosystem functioning and increased resilience. UNEP assists countries and regions in: integrating an ecosystem approach into development and planning processes; acquiring and improve the capacity to use ecosystem management tools; realigning environmental programmes; and financing priority ecosystem services. UNEP provides specialized expertise from different disciplines, including: assessment and monitoring (e.g., indicators, research and access to knowledge); risk management; management tools e.g., conservation and protection, restoration, sustainable management, legislation, certification; ecosystem economics e.g., payments for ecosystem services, incentives and financing mechanisms, valuation, equity and fairness principles; governance e.g., international agreements, legislation, policies; and capacity-building and technology support. (For full details on the programme, please visit
http://www.unep.org/ecosystemmanagement/)
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UNEP Green Economy Initiative
Mobilizing and re-focusing the global economy towards investments in clean technologies and 'natural' infrastructure such as forests and soils is the best bet for real growth, combating climate change and triggering an employment boom in the 21st century. In October 2008, UNEP and leading economists launched the Green Economy Initiative (GEI) aimed at seizing an historic opportunity to bring about tomorrow's economy today.
The GEI has three key elements: a Green Economy report providing an overview, analysis and synthesis of how public policy can help markets accelerate the transition towards a green economy; “The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB)” programme, a partnership project focusing on valuation issues; and a Green Jobs report. A phase II of the TEEB programme launched Feb 2009 will examine in greater detail how we can improve our economic models and policies to secure the flow of ecosystem services, in a transparent and fair way. This will not only protect biodiversity, but also improve the well-being of our present generation and the generations to come. Main objectives of Phase II of the TEEB study are to rethink today’s subsidies for tomorrow’s policies; create new markets and policy instruments; share the benefits of conservation more equitably; and account fully in economic terms for the costs and benefits of ecosystem services.
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A Global Green New DealThe world is in the middle of a financial and economic crisis, the most serious
since the Great Depression of the 1930s. As world leaders are busy devising a new international financial architecture to prevent future economic crises and
find ways to jump start recovery, there is another greater looming crisis: climate change. These global challenges are severely impacting our ability to sustain
prosperity in developed countries and achieve the Millennium Development Goals in the developing world. Beyond the immediate bailout of financial firms and
the design of the future international financial architecture, therefore, world leaders must take bold measures to resolve the multiple crises that are plaguing
humankind. UNEP's initiative on a Global Green New Deal is to enable governments to begin the shift towards a global economy driven by massive job creation
from the growth of resource- and energy-efficient building and construction; widespread use of modern public transport in mega cities; the scaling up of solar,
wind, wave, thermal, and bio energy in the total energy mix; sustainable chemicals and waste management as a highly lucrative sector; and sustainable agriculture
that reflects the latest thinking in ecosystem management and biodiversity and water conservation.
(For more information, please refer to the UNEP Policy Brief “A Global Green New Deal”)
For full information on UNEP’s Green Economy Initiative, please visit http://www.unep.org/greeneconomy/ |
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The England Ecosystem Approach Action PlanMany of the UK’s most acute environmental problems are now caused by diffuse pollution and the cumulative impacts of development,
and these problems are exacerbated by climate change. In the past, the policy framework for dealing with these issues has been complex
and fragmented, which has made it difficult to tackle them in the most efficient way and to reconcile conflicting priorities. The Ecosystems
Approach Action Plan forms the basis for a more strategic approach to policy-making and delivery on the natural environment. The action plan
sets out a strategic approach to policy and delivery on the natural environment. It sets out a number of actions to enable the UK Department
for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs(DEFRA), key partners and stakeholders to work together in applying an ecosystem approach to conserving,
managing and enhancing the natural environment in England. These actions are based on a number of core principles including: (i) taking a more
holistic approach to policy-making and delivery, with the focus on maintaining healthy ecosystems and ecosystem services; (ii) ensuring that the
value of ecosystem services is fully reflected in decision-making; (iii) ensuring environmental limits are respected in the context of sustainable
development, taking into account ecosystem functioning; (iv) taking decisions at the appropriate spatial scale while recognising the cumulative
impacts of decisions; and (v) applying adaptive management of the natural environment to respond to changing pressures, including climate change.
Progress towards delivering the goals of the Ecosystem Approach Action Plan will be measured using the following indicators: (i) Water quality as
measured by parameters assessed by the Environment Agency’s river water quality monitoring programmes; (ii) Biodiversity as indicated by changes
in wild breeding bird populations in England, as a proxy for the health of wider biodiversity; (iii) Air quality – meeting the Air Quality Strategy
objectives for eight air pollutants which affect public health: including particles and nitrogen dioxide; (iv) Marine health – clean, healthy, safe,
productive and biologically diverse oceans and seas as indicated by proxy measurements of fish stocks, sea pollution and plankton status; and (v)
Land management – the contribution of agricultural land management to the natural environment as measured by the positive and negative impacts of farming.
An Introductory Guide to Valuing Ecosystem Services has been published alongside the action plan. The aim of this Guide is to provide an introduction to
the valuation of ecosystem services. It builds on previous approaches to valuing the environment but takes a more systematic approach to the assessment
of impacts on the natural environment.
For further information, please contact: |
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Reconciling growth and social justice through an Ecosystem Approach, Papua Province, IndonesiaIndonesia has approximately 120.4 million ha of forest, the largest area of tropical forest in the world. Over the past decade, forest has been rapidly
destructed, with deforestation rate amounting to 1.6 million ha per annum, due to many causes, including over-cutting and illegal logging, forest burning and
clearing, occupation, land requirements for other sectoral development, and poor forest management. Papua Province of Indonesia is typical of many resource-rich
regions where high revenues have not translated into improved welfare for most of the rural population. This is mainly because land in most forest areas was formally
under state control, and millions of rural people living on customary forest lands are seen legally landless squatters. The failure of government to demarcate customary
rights and land use as the basis for designating forestry and mining concessions has exacerbated local people’s vulnerability and social exclusion. The case study on
Papua illustrates how government, civil society and the private sector in this region have been working to develop clearer and fairer rules governing the allocation
and management of forest lands. These efforts challenge long-held assumptions that customary tenure constitutes an obstacle to economic development, and that the
objectives of large-scale investment and conservation are incompatible with local community-controlled resources. For example, clan institutions realised they needed
to collaborate more effectively with one another, and formed clan federations. These were strengthened through mapping multiple clan areas, and developing natural
resource protection rules. Both highland and lowland clan federations are now engaged in creating and empowering institutions that will represent their interests to
local and provincial governments. Adaptive management is at work in the ecosystem areas with which they are associated. Small clan territories are linked first with
those of other clans, and common regulations are formulated in response to challenges from outside. Similarly, government concepts of land classification and institutional
responsibility must be adapted over time to working at a lower and more intense level, where land-use compromise is essential. The collaborative efforts by various
stakeholders in Papua region demonstrates that the multi-stakeholder forestry programme increased the likelihood of policy change in support of better ecosystem management
through encouraging better land-use policy, more understanding of livelihood needs, greater trust in local people’s technical management capacity, and a more bottom-up
approach.
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Ecosystem approaches and oceans at the UN General AssemblyIn 2005, the General Assembly requested the seventh meeting of the United Nations Open-ended Informal Consultative Process on Oceans and the
Law of the Sea to focus its discussions on the topic, “ecosystem approaches and oceans” (resolution 60/30). The meeting recognized that ecosystem
approaches to oceans management should be focused on managing human activities in order to maintain and, where needed, restore ecosystem health to
sustain goods and environmental services, provide social and economic benefits for food security, sustain livelihoods in support of international
development goals, including those contained in the United Nations Millennium Declaration, and conserve marine biodiversity. Significantly, the meeting
while recognizing that there was no single way to implement an ecosystem approach, agreed to suggest to the General Assembly elements relating to
ecosystem approaches and oceans, including the proposed elements of an ecosystem approach, means to achieve implementation of an ecosystem approach,
and requirements for improved application of an ecosystem approach (the report of the meeting is contained in document A/61/156). Subsequently, in
resolution 61/222, the General Assembly invited States to consider the agreed consensual elements. The General Assembly, in resolution 62/177, also
addressed the application of an ecosystem approach to sustainable fisheries. In order to assist States in developing and implementing ecosystem approaches
to ocean-related activities, the Division for Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea (DOALOS) of the Office of Legal Affairs, United Nations, has developed
an interdisciplinary manual and training course on “Developing and Implementing an Ecosystem Approach to the Management of Ocean-related Activities”.
In addition, the Division has published “Ecosystem Approaches and Oceans”, based on the outcome and discussions at the seventh meeting of the Consultative
Process (see document A/61/156), which focused its discussions on the topic.
For more information, please visit http://www.un.org/Depts/los/ecosystem_approaches/ecosystem_approaches.htm | ||||||||
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Contributors Ole Vestergaard (UNEP), Diana Mortimer (JNCC, UK), Gill Shepherd (IUCN), and Valentina Germani (UNDOALOS) |
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