Loss of animal species and crops is ‘devastating’: UN chief
Agence France Presse
UNITED NATIONS: The extinction of animal species, as well as the reliance on a narrow range of crops, is a major threat to the planet's development and security, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has said.
"This Day serves as a reminder of the importance of the Earth's biodiversity, and as a wake-up call about the devastating loss we are experiencing as irreplaceable species become extinct at an unprecedented rate," Ban said in a statement marking the International Day for Biological Diversity.
About a fifth of domestic animal breeds are at risk of extinction, with an average of one lost each month, and out of the 7,000 species of plants that have been domesticated over the 10,000-year history of agriculture, only 30 account for the vast majority of food consumed every day, according to U.N. environmental agency.
"Relying on so few species for sustenance is a losing strategy," the Secretary-General said. "Climate change is complicating the picture," he added, saying that livestock production accounted for more greenhouse gas emissions than transport.
"In a world where the population is projected to jump 50 per cent by the year 2050, these trends can spell widespread hunger and malnutrition, creating conditions where poverty, disease and even conflict can metastasize."
In a separate statement marking the day, from the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Convention on Biological Diversity, the CBD's Executive Secretary Ahmed Djoghlaf said: "If current extinction rates continue, it will be hard to provide sufficient food for a global population that is expected to reach nine billion by mid-century."
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environment: The last extinction
Achim Steiner, Ahmed Djoghlaf and Sigmar Gabriel
According to the UN Environment Programme’s Global Environment Outlook-4, the world is currently experiencing a sixth wave of extinctions, triggered in large part by our failure to manage natural assets
Farmers across Africa are currently engaged in an unequal struggle against a pestilent fruit fly whose natural home is in Asia. The fly, first detected in 2004 in Mombasa on the Kenyan coast, has since swept across the continent, decimating mangoes and other crops and devastating livelihoods.
In a bid to counter the fly, a team from the world-renowned ICIPE institute in East Africa recently went to Sri Lanka looking for a natural predator. Researchers have now pinpointed one, which, after careful screening, has been deemed safe to release into Africa’s environment and appears likely to defeat the unwelcome invader.
But the pioneering work is now on hold, as are the hopes of millions of farmers for an effective, environmentally friendly answer to the crisis. Countries in Asia — indeed, countries throughout the developing world — are simply not exporting their abundant and economically important genetic resources.
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), signed in 1992, promised an international regime on Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) of genetic resources. This would allow researchers and companies access to the developing world’s genetic treasure trove in return for a share of the profits from the products that are then developed.
But brokering the ABS regime has proven elusive, and, in the absence of an international deal, there has been diminishing access and thus declining benefit-sharing over the past five or so years. This implies potentially huge economic, environmental, and social losses to both the developed and developing world.
These losses include missed opportunities for breakthroughs in pharmaceuticals, foods, biologically-based materials and processes, and biological pest controllers like the promising one isolated by ICIPE. The losses also include failure to conserve the world’s dwindling wildlife and rapidly degrading ecosystems, which are worth trillions of dollars in terms of life-supporting services.
An intelligently designed ABS regime offers the chance for poorer countries, which possess the lion’s share of the globe’s remaining genetic resources, to begin to be paid properly for maintaining them. It could also play an important part in meeting the United Nation’s Millennium Development Goals, which include halving poverty by 2015.
Governments from more than 190 countries and an estimated 6,000 delegates have been meeting in Bonn, Germany for the Ninth Meeting of the Parties to the CBD. Governments have set their sights on securing an ABS regime by 2010, which is also the deadline agreed at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in 2002, to reduce substantially the rate of loss of biodiversity.
But accelerated action on many other broad biodiversity-related fronts is urgently needed. Indeed, according to the UN Environment Programme’s Global Environment Outlook-4, the world is currently experiencing a sixth wave of extinctions, triggered in large part by our failure to manage natural assets.
Thirty percent of global fish stocks have collapsed, up from roughly 15 percent in 1987, and the proportion of fish stocks classified as over-exploited has doubled, to around 40 percent.
Populations of freshwater vertebrates have declined on average by nearly 50 percent since 1987, while populations of terrestrial and marine species have fallen by around 30 percent.
In the Caribbean, more than 60 percent of coral reefs are threatened by sediment, pollution, and over-fishing.
Since the end of the Second World War, more land has been converted to agricultural use than in the previous two centuries.
Every year, 13 million hectares of tropical forests, which contain up to 80 percent of the planet’s biodiversity, are destroyed.
Roughly 35 percent of mangroves have been destroyed in the last 20 years.
But, alongside these sobering facts, the world is also full of shining and intelligent management. Indeed, protected areas now cover over 12 percent of the Earth’s surface, although the creation of marine reserves remains woefully low.
For example, Paraguay, which until 2004 had one of the world’s highest rates of deforestation, has reduced rates in its eastern region by 85 percent. And in Fiji, no-take zones and better management of marine areas has increased species like mangrove lobsters by 250 percent per year. Iraq’s marshlands have been restored, and local wheat varieties in Jordan and Syria have been preserved.
Nevertheless, despite these signs of progress, we are failing to confront the magnitude of the challenge, particularly in the translation of global agreements into legislation and action at the national and regional levels.
In Bali six months ago, the world achieved a breakthrough on climate change, and both developed and developing countries have embarked on a road map towards a new climate regime for 2012. We must become equally committed to reversing the rate of biodiversity loss.
The Bonn Biodiversity Conference represents an ideal opportunity to achieve a breakthrough, including on ABS. All of us, not just Africa’s fruit farmers, ultimately depend on nature’s bounty for our prosperity — indeed, for our very survival.
Achim Steiner is the Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme, Ahmed Djoghlaf is the Executive Secretary of the CBD, and Sigmar Gabriel is Germany’s Environment Minister
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2008%5C05%5C26%5Cstory_26-5-2008_pg3_6
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