German resolution reaffirms IUCN’s position
German resolution reaffirms IUCN’s position on
the international stage
Gland,
Switzerland, 27 January, 2017 (IUCN) – The German
government has officially recognised IUCN, the International
Union for Conservation of Nature, as an intergovernmental
organisation, reaffirming the Union’s important role on
the global environmental and development stage.
On
Wednesday, the German Cabinet passed a regulation defining
the legal status of IUCN as an “organisation created by
intergovernmental agreement”. This decision recognises the
official functions IUCN carries out on behalf of its Member
States and affords the Union a range of rights and benefits.
The new legal status will allow IUCN to build on its strong
presence in the city of Bonn, home to theIUCN Environmental Law Centre. The
regulation will now go to the ‘Bundesrat’ for
ratification in March 2017.
“IUCN is grateful to the German government and warmly welcomes this important recognition,” saysIUCN Director General Inger Andersen. “This opens up new opportunities to boost international cooperation on environmental issues. IUCN’s new legal status will reinforce IUCN’s already strong relationship with Germany. It will also allow us to strengthen our collaboration with key international partners based in Bonn, such as the UNFCCC, the UN Convention to Combat Desertification and the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species.”
“This decision recognises IUCN’s important role in global efforts to conserve nature. It also reaffirms the position of the city of Bonn as a hub of international cooperation and the headquarters for international institutions and organisations,” says the German Minister for the Environment, Barbara Hendricks.
Founded in 1970, the IUCN Environmental Law Centre in Bonn is recognised as a leading global centre of excellence in environmental law. The Centre houses a joint initiative between UNEP, FAO and IUCN providing web-based access to the three organisations’ environmental law information as well as two extensive libraries.
“This decision reaffirms Germany’s commitment to IUCN and to the Environmental Law Centre,” says Alejandro Iza, Director of the IUCN Environmental Law Centre. “Germany and the city of Bonn have been excellent hosts for over four decades, and this recognition opens up new avenues of collaboration.”
IUCN and Germany have a long history of very close collaboration. The German government has been an IUCN State Member since 1958 and has provided significant support for IUCN’s work on issues including tiger conservation and protected areas.
In 2011, IUCN and
Germany launched the Bonn Challenge – a global effort to
restore 150 million hectares of the world's degraded and
deforested lands by 2020. With over 136 million hectares
pledged, the Challenge is within close reach of achieving
its 2020 target.