The Wicked Problem of Climate Change: Protected Areas as part of a Natural Solution. Nik Lopoukhine Chair, WCPA

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Transcription:

The Wicked Problem of Climate Change: Protected Areas as part of a Natural Solution Nik Lopoukhine Chair, WCPA

Problems are stacking up The stocks of hydrocarbons that are profitable to extract are more than enough to take the world to levels of CO 2 well beyond 750ppm with very dangerous consequences for climate change impacts. Stern Report

2009 http://www.nasa.gov/home/index.html 2000 09 decade Warmest decade

Narwhals measuring Ocean temperatures of Southern Baffin Bay 1 1. K. L. Laidre, M. P. Heide-Jørgensen, W. Ermold, M. Steele. Narwhals document continued warming of southern Baffin Bay. Journal of Geophysical Research, 2010; 115 (C10) DOI: 10.1029/2009JC005820 The study found that 2006-07 temperatures were on average nearly a degree Celsius warmer than climatology data

Humanity s fundamental challenge a warming earth and climate chaos

Middelgrunden offshore wind farm,near Copenhagen, Denmark (55 40 N, 12 38 E) Yann Arthus Bertrand /

The 2009 Australian Black Saturday bushfires

Flooded houses south of Dhaka, Bangladesh (23 41N, 90 25 W) Yann Arthus Bertrand / Earth from above

But for biodiversity climate change is not the problem It comes on top of, and makes more difficult, many existing threats

The challenge Vegetation loss is already responsible for around 20% of global greenhouse gas emissions and furthermore Many ecosystems that are currently sinks for CO 2 could soon flip and become net sources due to climate change and other human impacts

Key Findings Continuing and accelerating loss High risk of dramatic loss Preventable /reversible with strong, urgent action Proposed Strategy Address climate change and biodiversity loss in close coordination Increase efficiency of resource use Use market incentives and avoid perverse subsidies Plan strategically Restore ecosystems Share benefits equitably Support and facilitate local action Communicate, educate and raise awareness

The role of protected areas is to contribute to the two main responses to climate change through: Mitigation Store Prevent Adaptation Protect Provide

Protected Area IUCN Definition A clearly defined geographical space, recognised, dedicated and managed, through legal or other effective means, to achieve the long-term conservation of nature with associated ecosystem services and cultural values The focus on Nature or biodiversity is in line with CBD PAs definition. N.B. protected area gives some an impression of exclusion protected by whom and from whom PAs are protected not from but for now and future generations

Protected area coverage growing UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre

The Worlds Protected Areas 1980: 40,000 protected areas covering 7,000,000 km 2 2009: 122,512 protected areas covering 21,457,755km 2 UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre

Percentage of territorial area protected by country UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre

WWF Ecoregions protected 466 of the 825 WWF Terrestrial Ecoregions (56%) currently meet the 10% Target UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre Source: UNEP WCMC, 2008

CBD Programme of Work on PAs - 4 elements Direct actions for planning, selecting, establishing, strengthening, and managing, protected area systems and sites Governance, participation, equity and benefit sharing Enabling Activities Standards, assessment, and monitoring

CBD COP10 - PoWPA Summit COP9 invited IUCN to contribute to the review process of PoWPA leading up to COP10 Meeting followed by regional workshops organised by the CBD in preparation for SBSSTA Workshop discussion centred on an issues paper widely circulated and commented on, plus feedback from over 60 national reports from Parties to the CBD, regional workshops and UNDP/GEF PoWPA project International Workshop on the future of the CBD PoWPA, Jeju, 2009

Key Climate Change recommendation Climate: Include protected area systems & surrounding landscapes / seascapes in international agreements regarding climate change response strategies, for both mitigation and adaptation purposes International Workshop on the future of the CBD PoWPA, Jeju, 2009

COP 10 Review of PoWPA Item 3.1.4 http://www.cbd.int/sbstta14/meeting/documents.shtml Specifically regarding climate change Continue implementing PoWPA focus on connectivity Improve C sequestration potential Communicate the value of Pas for CC Support and finance PAs and integrate them into NAPAs (national adaptation programmes of action) Para 6 of Copenhagen Accord Invites UNFCCC to recognize the role of PAs Calls for a joint convention meeting focused on PAs

Nagoya Outcome Connectivity of PAs Communicate PA values re CC Focus on important BD areas Finance and support Remind of UNFCC of values of PAs Convene a special meeting of Rio Conventions

Nagoya Strategic Plan - Target 11 By 2020, at least 17 per cent of terrestrial and inland water, and 10 per cent of coastal and marine areas, especially areas of particular importance for biodiversity and ecosystem services, are conserved through effectively and equitably managed, ecologically representative and well connected systems of protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures, and integrated into the wider landscape and seascapes.

Connectivity Conservation as a key climate change response

Connectivity Conservation Connectivity Conservation is a whole of landscape partnership approach that : works with many components of society holds and increases nature s s carbon stores and reduces carbon pollution promotes biodiversity, adaptive responses and hence resilience builds a landscape of conservation measures and sustainable use on varied tenures buffers and links protected areas can apply to marine as well as terrestrial landscapes

The Human Footprint Source: Wildlife Conservation Society, www.wcs.org

Y2Y Yellowstone to Yukon Length: 3207 km s Width: 202-805 km s Average height: 1,067 metres Landcover: 1.5% bare rock 18.9% tundra 59% forested 13.5% shrublands 4.5% grasslands 2.6% agricultural

Carbon storage and capture Protected areas are the most effective tool yet found for maintaining carbon in natural vegetation Oulanka National Park, Finland

WHY PAs and Climate Change? PAs cover 12% % of the world s s land surface and contain at least15% of the world s Carbon PAs are most effective as they have good capacity, (many in remote areas) efficient management, (management planning) strong support from local and resident communities. integrated into wider landscape and seascape strategies. No startup costs, socioeconomic costs are offset.

Governance and safeguards Defined borders and legislative frameworks Governance structures to address social and cultural needs Involve people in a legitimate and effective way Backed by a range of supportive conventions CBD, World Heritage, Ramsar, MAB, Man and the Biosphere, Regional agreements Natura 2000 The best PAs inspire how to manage International Union ecosystems for Conservation of Nature

Permanence PAs - a commitment to permanence and long-term management of ecosystems and natural resources Focus local, national and international attention on a particular protected area, adding to the area s protection

Effectiveness Management plans, mechanism for responding to new conditions Planning and managing PAs expertise applicable to broader landscape and seascape scale approaches History of tapping existing funding mechanisms, including government budgetary appropriations, GEF and LifeWeb Backed by experts - IUCN WCPA and ENGOs and other Governments

Monitoring, reporting and verification CBD commitments to establish ecologically representative protected area systems and to report new Web Based standard approved in Nagoya Global data sets and standards exist by which to monitor, such as the IUCN management categories, IUCN governance types IUCN Red List, and the UNEP WCMC IUCN WDPA.

WCPA Climate Change milestones Connectivity Conservation Publication Conservation planning best practice guideline Protected Areas and Climate Change Best Practice guideline series Climate Change Restoration Capacity Building

Next Steps WCPA Continue to participate in UNFCCC process to be sure EBA and PAs are embedded Lead in 4 COPs and RIO +20 in CBD Pavilion Protected Areas Day IUCN WCPA will continue to build up Natural Solutions case studies 39

Thank You!