Green gets Gold at Nature’s Olympics
Green gets Gold at Nature’s Olympics
Jeju Island, Republic of Korea,
15 September 2012 (IUCN) – As economic
difficulties continue to dominate international debate,
IUCN’s World Conservation Congress has put nature back at
the centre of the stage in the quest to recover our natural
assets and use nature to solve a growing list of economic
and social issues.
“The Congress, which has
become known in Korea as “Nature’s Olympics”, has
brought home gold for conservation,” says Julia
Marton-Lefèvre, IUCN Director General. “It has
demonstrated how nature-based solutions, as expressed in the
Congress slogan “Nature+”, help us address many of our
most pressing challenges.”
More than 10,000
people participated in the 2012 Congress on Jeju Island,
including over 5,000 conservation experts from 153 countries
and more than 550 events.
The crisis facing the
natural world was underlined with new statistics on the
decline of Caribbean corals and the publication of the top
100 most endangered species. Other highlights include
updates on the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems, the IUCN Green
List of Protected Areas, the Protected Planet Report and new
findings on locally managed forests.
A strong
emphasis was put on business responsibility. Major
corporations, such as Nespresso and Rio Tinto, set new
standards in sustainable practise, while Microsoft and
Google signed up to support innovative conservation
technologies. A €20m investment in biodiversity and
protected areas management was announced by IUCN and the
European Union.
More than 180 motions were proposed
to the Members’ Assembly, IUCN’s unique global
environmental parliament bringing together governments and
non-governmental organizations to debate and vote.
The Assembly approved resolutions on a wide range
of issues including action to recover Atlantic bluefin tuna
stocks and avert extinctions of rare dolphin species;
shutting down illegal bear farms; scaling back offshore
drilling in French Guiana, Suriname and Guyana; and
providing better payment channels for ecosystem services in
poor countries.
Action on stopping the escalating
poaching of elephants and rhinos was approved, and the push
for a globally binding treaty on protecting wildlife from
mercury contamination was endorsed, as was greater
enforcement of laws on wildlife crime and reducing the
impact of recreational divers on marine
environments.
IUCN’s work programme for the
coming four years was also approved, recognizing that global
production and consumption patterns are destroying nature,
and at the same time, people, communities, governments and
business are underutilizing the potential of nature and the
solutions it provides. The new programme builds upon
IUCN’s niche as the world’s leading authority on
biodiversity conservation.
As the Congress drew to
a close, Zhang Xinsheng of China was
elected as the new President of IUCN for the coming four
years. Zhang is co-founder and Executive Chairman of
Eco-Forum Global, and a devoted advocate for environmental
protection and sustainable development.
“I am
honoured to have been elected IUCN President in such an era
when the world needs IUCN more than ever,” says
Zhang. “This Congress has showed, more
than ever before, how by valuing and conserving nature, we
can achieve a more prosperous and harmonious
society”
ENDS