Global conservation summit sets the direction
Global conservation summit sets the direction for
post-2015 sustainability agenda
Honolulu,
Hawaii, 10 September 2016 (IUCN) – The IUCN
World Conservation Congress closed today in Hawaii,
setting the global conservation agenda for the next four
years and defining a roadmap for the implementation of the
historic agreements adopted in 2015.
The IUCN Congress closed with the presentation of the Hawai'i Commitments. This document, titled “Navigating Island Earth”, was shaped by debates and deliberations over the last ten days, and opened for comment to some 10,000 participants from 192 countries.
It outlines opportunities to address some of the greatest challenges facing nature conservation and calls for a commitment to implement them. It encapsulates the collective commitment by all who attended the Congress to undertake profound transformations in how human societies live on Earth, with particular attention to making our patterns of production and consumption more sustainable.
“Some of the world’s greatest minds and most dedicated professionals met here at the IUCN Congress to decide on the most urgent action needed to ensure the long-term survival of life on Earth and our planet’s ability to sustain us,” says Inger Andersen, IUCN Director General. “This IUCN Congress has come at a pivotal time in our planet’s history as we find ourselves at a crossroad, facing challenges of unprecedented magnitude.
“Today we leave Hawaii equipped with a much clearer
roadmap for advancing on the post-2015 agenda, confident
that we have taken our first steps on the road to a
sustainable future where nature and human progress support
each other.”
With more than 10,000 registered
participants, the event brought together leaders from
government, civil society, indigenous, faith and spiritual
communities, the private sector, and academia, to
collectively decide on actions to address the most pressing
conservation and sustainable development challenges.
More
than 100 resolutions and recommendations have been adopted
by IUCN Members – a unique global environmental parliament
of governments and NGOs – many of which call on third
parties to take action on a wide range of urgent
conservation issues.
Key decisions included
closure of domestic markets for elephant
ivory, the urgency of protecting the high
seas, the need to protect primary forests,
no-go areas for industrial activities within
protected areas and an official IUCN policy on
biodiversity offsets.
“International
decision-makers have converged on the most urgently needed
conservation action,” says IUCN President Zhang
Xinsheng. “IUCN’s more than 1,300 Members
behind these decisions give them the weight to drive the
real change needed to address some of the biggest challenges
our planet faces today.”
IUCN Members have also
approved a new programme for IUCN for the next four years
and elected new IUCN leadership.
The IUCN Congress put
new issues on the global sustainability agenda, including
the importance of linking spirituality, religion, culture
and conservation, and the need to implement nature-based
solutions – actions that protect and manage ecosystems,
while effectively addressing societal challenges, such as
food and water security, climate change, disaster risk
reduction, human health and economic well-being.
U.S.
President Obama’s announcement to expand the
Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument – now the
largest protected area in the world – set the scene for
the IUCN Congress.
Other announcements included the
commitment from Governor Ige of Hawaii to protect 30% of
Hawaii’s highest priority watershed forests by 2030,
effectively manage 30% of Hawai‘i’s nearshore waters by
2030, double local food production and achieve 100 %
renewable energy in the electricity sector by
2045.
Colombia has announced the quadrupling in size of
the Malpelo Fauna and Flora Sanctuary bringing it to 27,000
km2.
The IUCN Congress also saw new commitments to the
Bonn Challenge initiative to restore 150 million hectares of
degraded land by 2050. With the latest pledges from Malawi
and Guatemala, total Bonn Challenge pledges have now
exceeded 113 million hectares, committed by 36 governments,
organisations and companies.
The next IUCN World
Conservation Congress will take place in
2020.
Editors’ notes
Key resolutions and recommendations
adopted by the IUCN Congress
Illegal wildlife
trade
Following intense deliberations, IUCN Members have
urged all governments to close domestic markets of elephant
ivory, seen as creating opportunities for laundering illegal
ivory. Elephants are killed for their tusks across Africa,
threatening both the survival of savannah and forest
elephants and park rangers.
Combatting illegal wildlife
trade was also at the heart of an IUCN decision on the
alarming increase in the poaching of vicuña for its fibre.
IUCN Members have called for measures to be put in place to
promote the sustainable use of the species, and eliminate
the illegal trade, including greater traceability of vicuña
fibre and cross-border collaboration.
Hunting for
captive-bred lions
IUCN members have called for
legislation to ban – by 2020, and particularly in South
Africa – the breeding of lions in captivity for the
purpose of 'canned shooting', regarded by hunters as ‘an
ethically repugnant embarrassment’.
The high
seas
Members have also identified the need for
internationally binding legislation to preserve the high
seas, and have set an ambitious target of 30% of marine
areas to be protected by 2030. Nearly two-thirds of the
world’s ocean lies beyond the jurisdiction of
countries.
Indigenous peoples
IUCN Members have also
agreed to create a new category of IUCN membership for
Indigenous peoples’ organisations, boosting support for
Indigenous peoples’ rights on the international scene. A
large number of resolutions adopted by IUCN Members have
also contributed to strengthening Indigenous peoples’
rights.
Protection of primary forests
IUCN Members
have expressed support for the conservation of primary
forests, including intact forest landscapes. These are seen
to play a critical role in maintaining biodiversity, and are
vital for the protection of indigenous cultures, and
livelihoods of poor, marginalised communities.
No-go
areas
Another decision by IUCN Members has put all land
and seascapes classified under any of IUCN’s categories of
protected areas off limits for damaging industrial
activities – such as mining, oil and gas, agriculture –
and infrastructure developments – such as dams, roads and
pipelines. To date, only World Heritage sites have been
formally recognised as no-go areas.
Oil palm
industry
In another decision, IUCN Members stressed the
crucial need to identify intact forests and critical
ecosystems to be avoided by the fast-growing oil palm
industry. The rights of Indigenous peoples and local
communities should be respected and taken into
consideration, according to the decision. Activities of the
oil palm industry can have negative impacts on the
environment, such as the loss of habitat for great apes and
other primates, as well as on community
livelihoods.
Biodiversity offsets
IUCN Members have
also agreed on a policy on biodiversity offsets, emphasising
that priority must be given to avoid biodiversity loss.
Offsets must be a measure of last resort, and in certain
cases, they are not appropriate – according to the
Members.
Natural capital
IUCN Members have also
agreed to develop a policy defining natural capital, taking
into account ecological, ethical and social justice issues.
Members have noted emerging standards which aim to integrate
the value of nature in the decision-making of business and
financial institutions, and the need for an improved
understanding of natural capital.
The full text
of all motions can be accessed here.
Motions are proposed by IUCN Members every four years to set priorities for the work of IUCN.
The Members' Assembly is the highest decision-making body of IUCN. It brings together IUCN Members to debate and establish environmental policy, to approve the IUCN Programme and to elect the IUCN Council and President.
IUCN’s
membership currently stands at over 1,300 and
includes 217 state and government agencies, 1, 066 NGOs, and
networks of over 16,000 experts worldwide from more than 160
countries. Resolutions and Recommendations
on important conservation issues are adopted by this unique
global environmental parliament of governments and NGOs,
guiding IUCN’s policy and work programme and as well as
influencing many other organisations around the
world.
Scientific
announcements
Major scientific announcements
were released at the Congress, including the latest update
of the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species™ which declared
the eastern gorilla – the largest living primate –as
Critically Endangered due to illegal hunting, while
announcing the improvement in status of the giant panda.
IUCN also launched the most comprehensive review of the
scale and impact of ocean warming on nature and people
available to date.
For a full list of press releases
launched at the IUCN Congress go here.
Speakers
Speakers at the IUCN
Congress included HSH Prince Albert II of Monaco; Tommy
Remengesau Jr., President, Republic of Palau; Hilda Heine,
President, Republic of Marshall Islands; Edouard Fritch,
President of French Polynesia; Sally Jewell, U.S. Secretary
of the Interior; Patricia Espinosa, UNFCCC Executive
Secretary; Erik Solheim, UNEP Executive Director; John
Scanlon, Secretary-General of CITES; Daniel Calleja Crespo,
Director General of DG Environment, EU; Prof. Edward O.
Wilson, Founder of E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Foundation; Dr
Sylvia Earle, Ocean Elder and Founder of Mission Blue and Dr
Jane Goodall, Founder of the Jane Goodall
Institute.