Geoengineering

ECO 65(6)

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Legal, sustainable and safe use of biodiversity is a right of IPLCs

Community Leaders Network, Resource Africa, Namibian Association of CBNRM Support Organizations (NACSO) and African CSOs Biodiversity Alliance (ACBA)

 

While sustainable use is one of the three objectives of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), it remains in the shadows of the other objectives, especially the one on conservation. The Aichi Targets failed to deliver on sustainable use because of a disproportionate focus on conservation. Sustainable use it's about community ownership. And it is a positive, holistic approach to addressing biodiversity loss.

For sub-Saharan countries, sustainable use is not theoretical. It is the heart of local and national economies. It supports cultural and religious beliefs and livelihoods. It powerfully embraces conservation and benefit sharing -neither is viable without the other. Especially where the majority of the population is rural, it is a tool for empowerment of IPLCs. These rural populations understand the complexity of living with and managing biodiversity. In a globalised world where economic volatility is exacerbated by climate change, for rural communities the legal, sustainable and safe use of biodiversity is a vital safety net. So, why is #COP15 keeping sustainable use under the radar? This is because sustainable use is being labelled ‘backward’ when in fact, it continues to deliver major conservation and livelihood benefits.

Customary use is a part of sustainable use. To make “sustainable use” synonymous with “customary use” undermines the contribution of biodiversity to local and national economic activities. Africa cannot be reduced to a continent reliant only on a subsistence economy. We strongly urge COP15 to cast the sustainable, safe and legal use of biodiversity in a positive light and recognise and respect its broader contribution to the wellbeing of Africans.

 

“Nature Positive”: the new “con” in conservation

Simon Counsell, Advisor to Survival International

 

There has clearly been strong pressure from business lobbyists such as WBCSD and Business for Nature, along with certain big conservation corporations, for inclusion of the term ‘Nature Positive’ in the mission of the GBF. This slogan sounds nice, but could mark a serious step backward in achieving the objectives of the CBD.

“A Nature Positive world” is not a science-based aim like keeping climate change to 1.5 degrees. It moves the CBD away from its precisely defined mission concerning biodiversity to the very imprecise term “nature” – which has long been understood to be a cultural construct rather than a measurable object. It pitches the GBF into the realm of subjectivity, uncertainty and potential abuse. The separation it implies between humans and nature is widely discredited and alien to  manycommunities especially Indigenous Peoples. It begs many questions as to whose nature is being referred to, and what it means in terms of, say, genetic diversity, endangered species, endangered populations, ecosystems, biomes etc. Similar problems bedevil the term “nature recovery”.

Proponents of “Nature Positive” claim that it is “measurable”, though the massive list of things they say would have to be monitored is, in reality, highly implausible. For conservation organisations, perhaps “nature positive” helps sidestep the problem that the intended near-doubling of protected areas to 30% will not necessarily help biodiversity much, though it’ll certainly involve a lot of “nature”. For large corporations it could serve a similar role as misleading “net zero” does on climate. Corporate claims to “nature positivity” could involve almost anything involving living organisms, and conceal any amount of damage to actual biodiversity.

“Nature positivity” in fact invites a torrent of corporate greenwashing and false “solutions” rather than meaningful science-based action to protect biodiversity. It is the ultimate “nature based solution” – a solution to the problem of how to avoid any accountability for impacts. It offers a “contribution”: a mere part in place of the whole of biodiversity. It has no place in the GBF and should be rejected.

The original and extended version of this article is available at: https://redd-monitor.org/2022/12/07/nature-positive-the-new-con-in-cons…

 

Civil society organizations call CBD to strengthen precaution on geoengineering

Laura Dunn and Silvia Ribeiro, ETC Group

 

Ninety-one national and international organizations from forty countries released an open letter calling on the CBD and its Parties to reinforce the existing landmark decisions and moratorium on the deployment of climate geoengineering technologies.

Precautionary decisions from the CBD are more necessary than ever as geoengineering experiments increase. These experiments threaten land and marine ecosystems, the climate, the rights of Indigenous peoples and local communities around the world. Recently, Australia and the UK have conducted open-air solar and marine geoengineering experiments without reporting these activities to the UN. Other experiments in Sweden and Alaska have been blocked by Indigenous peoples and civil society organizations.

In an extremely concerning move, a body of the Paris Agreement on climate change, has proposed several geoengineering technologies as potential sources for carbon credits. Opposition from civil society stopped the decision, but the discussion is ongoing. This proposal (2) disregards the precautionary calls from the CBD and the fact that the London Convention on ocean dumping is evaluating these techniques for potential “adverse impacts on the marine environment”. The letter calls for the following:

  • Parties to the CBD must affirm precaution and prevent geoengineering from harming biodiversity, the environment, the climate, the rights of Indigenous peoples and the human rights of local communities and recall past CBD decisions against geoengineering.
  • COP 15 must ensure that geoengineering (including "Nature Based Solutions") is explicitly excluded from the Global Biodiversity Framework and any other decisions on marine biodiversity and climate at COP15.
  • The CBD Secretariat should proactively reach out to all other UN bodies discussing geoengineering to share relevant CBD decisions, highlighting the need for precautionary approach.
  • Parties to the CBD must require countries to report on any geoengineering initiative taken in or by their countries.

Sign the letter at: https://forms.gle/CYDrJZTdPSa5yCRb8

(1) Available at: http://bit.ly/3WaqpeT
(2) Available at: https://bit.ly/3hrMKWy

 

Centering Human Rights in the global biodiversity agenda

Cristina Eghenter, WWF International

 

COP15 of the Convention of Biological Diversity (CBD) is in the final week of negotiations on the next global biodiversity framework. Resource mobilization and DSI need to be resolved in effective and just ways. Human rights and equity need to be centered in the framework and its implementation. For people and nature, the stakes have never been higher.

For biodiversity conservation and the resilience of life systems, a human rights-based approach (HRBA) is an essential and enabling condition. A global commitment to transform a development model that has undermined biodiversity for the benefit of a few, is urged by civil society, Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs), women and youth. HRBA recognizes and empowers all custodians of biodiversity and rights holders who have too often been neglected, “invisible” in biodiversity decision- and policy-making. Without Indigenous Peoples, local communities, women, and other custodians of land, water and life, we cannot heal our broken relationship with nature.

Applying human rights to halt and reverse biodiversity loss requires deep transformation of production and consumption. Businesses need to adhere to both environmental and human rights standards. Governance systems need to be inclusive, embedding the knowledge and institutions of those rights holders who are most dependent on biodiversity, and its best custodians. IPLCs, women and girls and youth need to be empowered, supported with adequate resources, and equal partners in any planning and decision-making impact on their lives, waters and territories. The Montreal negotiators must deliver on their good intentions, with strong and effective rights-based rules, to realize the vision of an ecological harmony between humanity and nature. Only by doing so can we bequeath future generations a thriving planet.

 

ECO 58

All ECOs published during COP14, Cartagena MOP9 and Nagoya MOP3

Issue 1:

  • Synthetic Biology
  • Risk assessment/ Risk management
  • Local Biodiversity Outlooks

Issue 2:

  • CBD Alliance Opening statement
  • Mainstreaming Action at COP14
  • Geoengineering: Ignoring CBD decisions at the United Nations Environment Assembly?
  • The peasant's movement La Via Campesina is urging for a moratorium on gene drives
  • Herbivory: critical to coral reef health
  • Pressure Mounts for a Solution on Benefit Sharing
    for Digital Sequence Information

Issue 3 - Special IIFB issue:

  • Integration of Article 8(j) and provisions related to indigenous peoples and local communities in the work of the Convention and its Protocols
  • Biodiversity & climate change: Indigenous Peoples Traditional Knowledge is Key
  • The importance of dialogue
  • Listening to the voice of our Mother Earth
  • Statement on Socio-economic considerations
  • Review of progress in the implementation of the Convention and the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020

Issue 4:

  • Do Not Betray Africa on SynBio and Gene Drives - Civil Society Organisations urge African Governments
  • UN aviation proposals threatens biodiversity goals
  • Mainstreaming
  • Addressing conflicts of interest in CBD processes
  • extinction rebellion

Issue 5:

  • Conflict of interest
  • Gene drives
  • UN declaration on the rights of peasants and other people working in rural areas
  • Environmental defenders

Issue 6:

  • Who benefits from gene drives and modern biotechnology?
  • Post-2020 plenary: A wasted afternoon
  • Farmers’ seeds underpin biodiverse food systems
  • Salmon farms are threatening Chilean Patagonia
  • Deforestation, monocultures and Strategic Plans

Issue 7

  • Illegal use of pro-GM propaganda: Tanzania orders the destruction of GM field trials
  • Will yet another GM-trial ban in Africa help the moratorium on synthetic biology?
  • Civil society on post 2020 global biodiversity framework
  • Mainstreaming human rights in the CBD: The Escazú Agreement, a contribution from Latin America and the Caribbean

Issue 8

  • Deep-Sea Mining and Biodiversity Loss
  • Target 21: Venues must contribute to biodiversity loss
  • "Those who fail to learn from history are condemned to repeat it"
  • More vigorous engagement with parliamentarians
  • urged in pursuing CBD targets

Issue 9

  • Of mosquitoes and men
  • Geoengineering: C2G2 and IPLCs
  • "We are running behind..."

Issue 10

  • The Paris Agreement as inspiration?
  • A Stumbling Block for Implementation

 

 

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ECO 55

All ECOs published during SBSTTA 21 and Art. 8j Working Group in Montreal, 11-16 December 2017

Issue 1

  • CBD Alliance Opening Statement
  • Synbio AHTEG: Open Letter to the Executive Director of the CBD
  • Agricultural Biodiversity, Farmers' Rights and the SDGs
  • Scenarios for the 2050 Vision
  • When mining means extinction
  • Marginalisation - sorry: Mainstreaming biodiversity in the energy and mining, infrastructure, manufacturing and processing, and health sectors

Issue 2

  • Sustainable wildlife management: guidance for achieving a more sustainable bushmeat sector
  • Biodiversity grows Healthy Food Systems
  • Living in Harmony with Earth
  • You have one minute.
  • Biodiversity versus the climate? Geoengineering in the UNFCCC

Issue 3

  • “One Health” and effect of Uranium mining
  • Offsetting – a counterproductive mainstreaming tool
  • Mainstreaming biodiversity in the energy and mining, infrastructure, manufacturing and processing, and health sectors
  • Towards a global post-2020 biodiversity framework
  • About Biodiversity Governance and Conflicts of Interests

Issue 4

  • Recommendations of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues: Environmental defenders & UNPFII recommendations
  • Who comes first in a “first world” country?
  • ICCAs

Issue 5

  • Indigenous and Local Knowledge(s) and Science(s): Complementary knowledge systems for Sustainable Development

 

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Geoengineering is a distraction from the real priorities Emission reductions

To: UNFCCC party representatives and delegates, 
researchers in IPCC and UNFCCC stakeholders

Geoengineering is a distraction from the real priorities  Emission reductions

Dear UNFCCC party representatives and delegates, dear researchers in IPCC and UNFCCC stakeholders,

NDCs submitted to the UNFCCC so far clearly fail the ambition needed to put us on track for limiting climate change to 1.5°C rise. As it becomes more and more evident that there is a lack of political will to substantially decrease climate gas output, discussions on how to reach the 1.5°C target agreed in Paris turn more and more to uncertain and unavailable technologies for removing carbon from the atmosphere, in short geoengineering. The draft IPCC AR6 also mentions this issue in its outline, and new geoengineering experiments are planned (see 13 November’s ECO article “This is Not a Drill: Geoengineering is on the Rise” - http://eco.climatenetwork.org/cop23_cmp13_cma2-eco7-5/

Wishful thinking about technologies that may or may not one day become available carries the risk of legitimizing "business-as-usual-policies". They do not increase and may even decrease political will to address the root causes: powerful and unsustainable production and consumption patterns. They tend to postpone or replace pathways to systemic holistic change, which can deliver multiple benefits against climate change, biodiversity loss, and desertification. Without these benefits the 2030 Agenda is meaningless.

Proposals for geoengineering, including experiments, distract dangerously from the real priority – immediate unilateral reduction of emissions caused directly or indirectly by the global north, who bear most responsibility for them. Only this can build the trust we need to really tackle climate change and biodiversity loss.

Only yesterday, the executive secretaries of the three Rio Conventions issued a joint statement calling for assistance to address links between climate change, biodiversity and desertification threats. Civil society has long been making this connection and therefore, the members of the CBD Alliance present at this meeting would kindly inform or remind delegates that the issue of geoengineering has been extensively discussed at the CBD COPs since 2008 and that, as a result, any kind of geoengineering has been subjected to a moratorium (CBD decision X/33, paragraphs 8 w and x). This has been scrutinized at following COPs which have always reaffirmed the moratorium (CBD decision XIII/14, para 1) since.

With the exception of the US, the parties to CBD and UNFCCC are the same, and both conventions are nearly universal. We therefore urgently call on the parties of the UNFCCC to respect the CBD decisions agreed by consensus by their own governments, which apply to them as well. Pacta sunt servanda, as the Vienna Convention on the law of treaties rightly points out in its article 26: “Every treaty in force is binding upon the parties to it and must be performed by them in good faith”.

Thank you and best regards,
(see list of signatories on following page)

List of signatories - CBD Alliance members:

  • BUND – Friends of the Earth Germany

  • Pro Natura – FoE Switzerland

  • Friends of the Earth International 

  • Econexus

  • ARA

  • Attac France

  • FERN

  • Global Nature Fund

  • New Wind Association (Finland)

  • Centar za životnu sredinu– FoE Bosnia

  • Ethological Society of India
  • 
ICCA Consortium

  • USC Canada

  • Ecoropa

  • SAN Germany

  • Coordination Office of the Austrian Bishop’s Conference for International Development and Mission (KOO)
  • Tim Cadman BA (Hons) MA (Cantab), PhD (Tasmania), Grad. Cert. Theol. (Charles Sturt) Griffith University

  • Heinrich Böll Stiftung
  • 
Pro REGENWALD

  • Gesellschaft für ökologische Forschung

  • Mangrove Action Project