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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, December 3, 2018
To preserve our planet, we need a global framework for conservation

Human activities are exacting a devastating toll on the diversity of life on Earth. Source: Shutterstock

By Policy Forum -
THE UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) has
the unenviable job of being the peak global body for the conservation
and sustainable use of biodiversity. Almost all of the CBD’s 196 member states are currently meeting at its 14th Conference of the Parties in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt.
The meeting is taking place amid growing alarm among scientists and
conservationists about the devastating toll that human activities are
having on the variety of life on Earth and its essential roles in
sustaining human life and wellbeing.
Between 1970 and 2014, wildlife populations have declined on average by an astounding 60 percent. In Australia, threatened-species habitat the size of Tasmania has been destroyed since 2000, and the list of threatened species and ecological communities has increased by 30 per cent during this time.
In 2010, the CBD launched a set of 20 ambitious targets – the Aichi
Targets – that countries aimed to achieve by 2020. Regrettably, few of these targets will be met. The likely main exception is Target 11,
which aims for the effective and equitable conservation of at least 17
percent of terrestrial areas and 10 percent of coastal and marine areas.
One reason for this shortfall is a lack of robust measures to hold nations to account for progress towards the targets. But ultimately, one of the biggest factors is the lack of political priority that decision-makers put on conserving nature.
With the 2020 deadline just around the corner, countries are now beginning to discuss in
earnest how to set the next round of targets. The endpoint for the new
targets will likely be 2030, coupled with a longer-term goal for 2050.
The new targets – which many hope will herald a ‘New Deal for Nature’ – will be launched at the CBD’s next conference in Beijing in 2020.

Firefighters try to extinguish flames during a wildfire at the village
of Kineta, near Athens, on July 24, 2018. Source: Valerie Gache/AFP
Understandably, much of the negotiators’ attention at the meeting in Egypt has been on mapping out a process for
crafting the targets. Ensuring that this process is inclusive and
transparent is critical for the legitimacy of the targets, and there’s
much to be learnt from the way in
which the Sustainable Development Goals were created. But attention to
procedure shouldn’t distract from the substance and urgency of what is
at stake.
Given that previous targets haven’t managed to bend the curve of
biodiversity loss very far, setting another round of global targets
might seem like a futile exercise. Ultimately many of the actions that
will make the biggest different need to happen at national and local
levels.
But global cooperation remains an essential part of the solution, not
least because the drivers of biodiversity loss are closely interwoven
with the workings of the global economy. For example, everyday products
that Australians consume – from chocolate to shampoo – may contain palm
oil from Indonesian plantations on land that was once forested habitat
for orangutans.
Drawing on new research set out in a forthcoming book on The Politics of the Anthropocene we can think of the challenge confronting the CBD as one of creating a ‘living framework’.
That is, the CBD needs to build an institutional framework for action
that is flexible enough to respond to changing social and ecological
conditions, but robust enough to provide a foundation for global
cooperation.
While the track record of environmental problem-solving at a global
level isn’t great, elements of living frameworks can be found. Perhaps
the best example is the success of the Montreal Protocol in reversing ozone layer depletion. As we argue in other research, the Paris Agreement on
climate change also has a promising mix of flexibility and stability,
with five-yearly cycles of national contributions and review housed in a
legally binding treaty.

Cattle on a dry paddock in the drought-hit area of Quirindi in New South
Wales, Australia, August 7, 2018. Source: Glenn Nicholls/Shutterstock
Even so, we need to be careful about how far the parallels can be drawn between climate change and biodiversity. One big difference is the lower political profile of
biodiversity compared to the high geopolitical stakes evident in UN
climate talks. So a key question is what, if anything, the CBD can do to
build political will and catalyse cooperation.
A promising approach here is to build on a strategy adopted in the UN climate regime, which is for the CBD to act as an ‘orchestrator’ that harnesses the enthusiasm of other actors, such as civil society, business and clubs of committed states.
A positive development in this area is the newly formed Coalition of the Willing on Pollinators.
The Coalition aims to curb dramatic declines in bee populations and
other species which pollinate crops that are vital for human nutrition.
The grouping was formed in 2016 during the CBD’s previous conference in
Cancun, Mexico, and now includes 24 members, including the European
Commission.
Coalitions such as these can accelerate implementation, foster
cooperation across different sectors (such as the agricultural and
chemical industries in this case) and help to hold members accountable
for their commitments.
Global gatherings can also put a spotlight on
countries that are falling behind. To the surprise of many delegates
and observers, the Australian government decided not to send a
delegation to the conference, citing security reasons. The safety of
government officials is an understandable concern. Nevertheless, it’s
vital that Australia – as one of the world’s seventeen ‘megadiverse’ countries – remains actively engaged in shaping the future of nature conservation.
Dr Jonathan Pickering is a
Postdoctoral Fellow based at the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and
Global Governance at the University of Canberra.
Pierrick Chalaye is a PhD candidate at the Centre for Deliberative Democracy and Global Governance, University of Canberra.
This piece was first published at Policy Forum, Asia and the Pacific’s platform for public policy analysis and opinion.

