Biodiversity Economy Strategy (BES)

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Biodiversity Economy Strategy (BES) Preshanthie Naicker-Manick Biodiversity and Conservation

Outline Purpose Biodiversity Economy Process to develop BES BES Way Forward Recommendation

Biodiversity Economy The biodiversity economy of South Africa encompasses the business- and economic activities that either directly depend on biodiversity for their core business or that contribute to conservation of biodiversity through their activities. Adopted from: Van Paddenburg, A., Bassi, A., Buter, E., Cosslett C. & Dean, A. 2012. Heart of Borneo: Investing in Nature for a Green Economy

Bioprospecting Industry Formal market Informal market Resource segment Biotrade segment Final market segment Cultivation Farmers Harvesters Wild harvesting Harvesters NGOs Category 1&2 traders Biotrading Category 3 traders Researchers Export Sales Domestic Retail Sales (Value added products): Personal hygiene products Cosmetics Oils Food flavourings Complimentary medicines Traditional market The formal, commercialised bioprospecting market, although fledgling, is growing rapidly This market can be delineated into three value adding segments, the resources segment, the biotrade segment and the final market segment Products containing indigenous plant resources and bee products sell between 50%-100% more by retail value. Revenue generated in bioprocessing segment ~ R580m (2013) Revenue generated from value-added bio-products in the domestic retail market = R1.55 bn in 2013

Biodiversity Economy Wildlife Resource segment Agricultural inputs Game capture and transport Hunting equipment Taxidermy Meat processing Other: Accommodation, transport, etc Farming segment Wildlife Ranches Wildlife farming (e.g. ostriches, crocodiles) Biltong hunting Profession al hunting Game meat production Live sales Wildlife products Final market segment Domestic Hunters Internati onal Hunters Export and Domestic retail: Game meat, skins, leather, curios The estimated final demand segment (2013) (total expenditure) : R10.0 billion (excl wildlife products) 170,000 jobs Some outputs : Domestic hunters expenditure = R6.4 billion International hunters expenditure = R1.4 billion Live game sales including auction sales, direct sales and translocation services = R1.7 billion R540 million through sales of venison, wildlife products and non-hunting accommodation

Transformation of the sector: BES Transformation of the sector: BES SECRET 6

BES Process Stage Status Timeframe Development of BES concept 2013-2014 Stakeholder Buy-in for the BES 2013-2014 Appoint an independent consultant to assist developing the BES 2013-2014 & 2014-2015 Appointment of provincial representatives 2014-2015 National Stakeholder consultation 2014-2015 Departmental & Intergovernmental approval Work in Progress 2015-2016 Cabinet approval Approved 2015-2016 Mini Phakisa 2015-2016 Launch of BES 2015-2016 or 2016-2017 Implementation of BES 2016-2030 Implementation Monitoring & Evaluation Biennially

BES Vision & Mission Vision: Optimised economic benefits from the sustainable use of South Africa s biodiversity. Mission: Is to enhance and create new and inclusive opportunities for economic growth through biodiversity based initiatives. Scope: Has the scope of Leadership, Coordination and Transformation of the Bioprospecting and Wildlife industries.

BES Goal By 2030, the South Africa s biodiversity economy will achieve an inclusive average annualised GDP growth rate of 10% per annum. Goal Focus: 18 Biodiversity Economy transformation nodes (rural and urban)

18 BIODIVERSITY ECONOMY TRANSFORMATION NODES RURAL BIODIVERSITY ECONOMY TRANSFORMATION NODES Province District Communities Priority Eastern Cape (3 Nodes) KwaZulu-Natal (4 Nodes) Alfred Nzo Amathole OR Tambo Ugu Mbizana Peddie Mhlontlo umzumbe, Vulamehlo, Umdoni, Hibiscus Coast, Ezinqoleni, Umuziwabantu Medium-Long term Medium-Long term Umkhanyakude Umhlabuyalinga and Tembe Free-State (2 Node) Umzinyathi Umzimkhulu Xhariep Umzimkhulu Letsemeng Mohokare Medium-Long term Limpopo (1 Node) Thabo Mofutsanyane Sekhukhune Batlokwa Potlake Medium-Long term Ephraim Mohale Northern Cape John Taolo Gaetsewe Kuruman Medium-Long term (2 Node) Pixley ka Seme Douglas North-West Ngaka Modiri Molema Baralong Ba Medium-Long term (1 Node) Ratlou URBAN BIODIVERSITY ECONOMY TRANSFORMATION NODES Gauteng City of Johannesburg Alexandra Medium-Long term (1 Node) Limpopo (1 Node) Polokwane Capricorn Medium-Long term Western Cape City of Cape Town Khayelitsha-Mfuleni Medium-Long term (2 Node) Eden Keurbooms / Avontuur Mpumalanga Ehlanzeni Medium-Long term (1 Node) Andover Lamington Injaka And Sisonke Mlambongwane Community Mjindindini EMcakwini/Babango

BES Principles Based on the NDP objectives, BES seeks to address transformation imperatives through the following principles: Conservation of biodiversity and ecological infrastructure Sustainable use of indigenous resources Fair and equitable benefit-sharing Socio-economic sustainability Incentive driven compliance to regulation Ethical practices Improving quality and standards of products

Wildlife Industry Targets Conservation area expansion: 2 million ha of communal land restored and developed for conservation and commercial game ranching. Jobs: 60,000 jobs created across value chain. 7 Billion equity: R4 billion in game and R3 billion on fixed assets and infrastructure resulting in improved rural income, skills development, institutional capacity building, entrepreneurship and food and environmental security. Empowerment and ownership: 300 000 heads of wildlife under black empowered and owned ranches.

Bioprospecting Industry Targets Bioprospecting Sector Expansion: Grow cultivation of bioprospecting ingredients by at least 500 hectare per annum. At least triple the number of RSA products in domestic & international markets. Jobs: 30-50% of RSA bioprospecting products must have community participation in the supply chain. Equity: R250 mil product development and sales from SMME and R250 mil on fixed assets and infrastructure resulting in improved income, skills development, institutional capacity building, entrepreneurship and food and environmental security. Sustainable Use: Establish a National Repository of natural product compounds, Biodiversity Market Bank.

Role Players The role players in the biodiversity economy in South Africa include: Communities Industry Academia Science councils Non-governmental organisation Community-based organisation and cooperatives Local, Provincial and National government National and Provincial conservation agencies and entities

Overview of Strategic Transformation Interventions (STI s) Lead collective ownership Regulatory optimisation In the context of environmental sustainability Permitting, standards, Other Institutional / organisational architecture Develop an effective and efficient government supporting institution for both industries Enhance R & D Attract investment and access to finance Private investment Government investment Promoting exports / foreign income Domestic markets International markets Enhancing education and skills development Training Research support Part of school curriculum Facilitating technology exchange and innovation Fostering and supporting Entrepreneurship Marketing and Public Relations Economic Transformation Initiative Formalise and cost a community wildlife and bioprospecting industry development plan Land reform models Develop a Charter and BBBEE scorecard Advocacy for both industries

Way forward Departmental & Inter-governmental approval: 4D & 3D 2 nd Consultation with key stakeholders Mini Phakisa

Moscow Marumo (PhD) Chief Director: Biodiversity Economy and Sustainable Use Email: Mmarumo@environment.gov.za Ms Natalie Feltman Director: Bioprospecting and Biodiversity Economy Email: Nfeltman@environment.gov.za