Voluntary Peer Review
The overall objective of the Convention’s Voluntary Peer Review (VPR) process is to support Parties to improve their individual and collective capacities to implement the Convention more effectively through the preparation and implementation of National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plans (NBSAPs).
In 2015, further to the Conference of the Parties (COP) decision XII/29, the JBF organized an Informal Working Group comprised of 17 experts nominated by Parties from different regions to develop a methodology, in a participatory fashion, for the VPR process under the Convention. The resulting methodology was tested by Parties in Ethiopia and India in 2015 and 2016, respectively, before being piloted in Montenegro, Sri Lanka, and Uganda in 2017, 2018 and 2019. The pilot phase was led and implemented by the JBF, with the intention to transfer the now mature methodology to the Monitoring Unit of the Secretariat. To keep Parties and other stakeholders informed and to share results as well as to encourage Parties to volunteer to be reviewed, the JBF organized and implemented side-events on the VPR during COP12, COP13, and COP14.
In 2018, decision 14/29 of the Conference of the Parties welcomed progress made in the development of a VPR mechanism and the positive results from the pilot phase and decided to include the VPR as an element of the multidimensional review approach under the Convention. The VPR process is transparent and inclusive, fostering mutual respect and understanding among peers, thereby creating an environment of trust, conducive to learning and to assessing implementation for the benefit of the country under review.
In addition to providing a methodology for the national review of implementation, the VPR also assesses capacity-building needs, and therefore can contribute to the long-term strategic framework for capacity-building beyond 2020, with the potential to effectively improve collective and individual capacities for implementation at all levels of governance and within all sectors and stakeholder groups. A particularly strong emphasis is placed on raising awareness among authorities in the finance and planning ministries of the role that biodiversity conservation can play in achieving sustainable development.