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Paris Agreement: Groups ask governments to produce African Rule Book

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Leading non-state actors and civil society groups from across Africa have called on African governments to kick-start the process of designing an African Rule Book for the implementation of the Paris Agreement.

AMCEN-PACJA
Discussants at the African Civil Society Consultative Workshop organised by PACJA ahead of the 16th Session of the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) in Libreville, Gabon. They called on African governments to kick-start the process of designing an African Rule Book. Photo credit: CSDevNet/atayibabs

The book, according to them, will help in galvanising a robust presentation of African perspectives in the Paris Rule Book which is being formulated.

The call was made on Sunday, June 11, 2017 at the ongoing civil society consultative talks which precedes the 16th session of the African Ministerial Conference on Environment (AMCEN) in Libreville, Gabon.

Recognising the strategic importance of the Paris Rule Book to the implementation of the climate agreement, the non-state stakeholders urged African environment ministers to ensure that the continent is not left behind in the efforts at crafting the regulatory framework for the implementation of the Paris Agreement.

“We want an African Rule Book for the implementation of the Paris Agreement that will better measure and manage climate action and support in the light of varying quality and level of information included in countries’ national climate plans (NDCs),” John Bideri, the Co-Chair of the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA), said.

“An African Rule Book will help in scaling up actions and support at the right pace as many of the NDCs submitted by countries are not ambitious enough to achieve the Paris Agreement’s objectives,” Bideri added.

The urgency of the call for an African Rule Book is further underlined by the latest UNEP Gap Report which revealed that the climate plans submitted by all parties to the Paris Agreement can only limit global warming to 3o degree C if fully implemented and the conditions highlighted in the submissions are met.

This alarming report, according to Yamide Dagnet of the World Resources Institute, justifies the readiness of civil society groups like PACJA and WRI to mobilise resources and partnerships capable of supporting the drafting of the African Rule Book by African governments.

 

The Paris Rule Book

At the recent UN climate negotiations in Bonn which featured the 46th sessions of the Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI 46) and Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA 46) as well as the session of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the Paris Agreement, negotiations on the key elements of the Paris Rule Book began in earnest.

According to Achala Abeysinghe, a long serving legal and strategy advisor to the Least Developed Countries Group (LDC), “The Paris Agreement is just an empty shell without the Rule Book”.

The Paris Rule Book seeks to establish the rules and processes needed to provide the operational guidance for fulfilling the ambition of the Agreement and providing clarity on countries’ efforts to reach the global goal.

The rule book comes on the heels of the Paris Agreement which created an international framework that outlines what governments and wider stakeholders are expected to do strengthening the global response to climate change and limit the temperature increase to 1.5 – 2 degrees C.

It therefore seeks to flesh out how the global response will be orchestrated.

By 2018 negotiators are expected to reach an agreement on the rule book which will include details on how countries will communicate their efforts with regards to adaptation, climate finance, transfer of technology and capacity building, and how they will be held accountable for their commitments.

It will also establish how collective efforts will be reviewed, leading to scaled-up actions and support every five years; as well as create a facilitatory process for the implementation of the agreement and promote compliance.

Courtesy: PAMACC News Agency

Ocean Conference: Countries agree on decisive actions to restore marine health

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The 193 Member States of the United Nations unanimously agreed to a set of measures that will begin the reversal of the decline of the ocean’s health as the five-day Ocean Conference came to a close in New York on Friday, June 9, 2017.

The outcome document, together with more than 1,300 commitments to action, observers say, marks a breakthrough in the global approach to the management and conservation of the ocean.

Ambassador Peter Thomson
President of the UN General Assembly, Peter Thomson

The Ocean Conference, the first UN conference of its kind on the issue, is believed to have raised global consciousness of ocean problems ranging from marine pollution to legal and over fishing, from ocean acidification to lack of high seas governance. By including all stakeholders in the discussions, the Conference, according to the organisers, produced a comprehensive and actionable range of solutions.

“The Ocean Conference has changed our relationship with the ocean,” said the President of the UN General Assembly, Peter Thomson. “Henceforth none can say they were not aware of the harm humanity has done to the ocean’s health. We are now working around the world to restore a relationship of balance and respect towards the ocean.”

Wu Hongbo, Under-Secretary-General for Economic and Social Affairs and Secretary-General of the Ocean Conference, said the Conference marked a major step forward for the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals.

“Participants from member States, NGOs, civil society, the private sector, the scientific community and academia engaged in wide-ranging discussion and shared state-of-the-art knowledge and latest information on marine science and challenges,” he said.

“They showcased and put forward many innovative solutions, which can help us achieve Sustainable Development Goal 14, and through its interlinkages the other SDGs and targets,” he added.

Conference Outcomes
Recognising that the wellbeing of present and future generations is inextricably linked to the health and productivity of the ocean, countries collectively agreed in the Call to Action (hyperlink: http://bit.ly/2rbdtqi) “to act decisively and urgently, convinced that our collective action will make a meaningful difference to our people, to our planet and to our prosperity.”

While the ocean partnership dialogues focused on the multiple problems and challenges the ocean is facing, all participants offered solutions and commitments to reverse these challenges.

The Call for Action was formally adopted at the conclusion of the Conference, as well as the reports from the seven partnership dialogues that have focused on scaling up solutions, and the voluntary commitments to action.

In the Call for Action, countries agreed to implement long-term and robust strategies to reduce the use of plastics and microplastics, such as plastic bags and single use plastics.

Countries also agreed to develop and implement effective adaptation and mitigation measures that contribute to ocean and coastal acidification, sea-level rise and increase in ocean temperatures, and to address the other harmful impacts of climate change on the ocean.  The Call recognises the importance of the Paris Agreement on climate change.

The Call for Action also includes measures to protect coastal and blue carbon ecosystems, such as mangroves, tidal marshes, seagrass and coral reefs, and wider interconnected ecosystems, as well as enhancing sustainable fisheries management, including restoring fish stocks in the shortest time feasible at least to levels that can produce maximum sustainable yield. Countries are called upon to decisively prohibit certain forms of fisheries subsidies which contribute to overcapacity and overfishing, and eliminate subsidies that contribute to illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing.

The commitments, in turn, address all the issues needed to achieve Sustainable Development Goal 14 – Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources – and produced significant results:

  • Commitments made at the Conference indicate that the world is well on track to protect over 10 per cent of the globe’s marine areas by 2020.  The commitments made during the conference add 4.4 per cent of marine areas to the existing number.
  • Many countries announced steps to reduce or eliminate various single use plastics, such as plastic shopping bags, which ultimately find their way to the ocean.
  • Numerous countries announced that they were stepping up their efforts to reduce the amount of sewage and pollution entering the ocean from land-based activities.
  • Many commitments focused on expanding scientific knowledge about the ocean and developing and sharing innovative technologies to address ocean challenges.
  • There were new commitments to protect and manage fisheries. Some countries announced “no-take zones” for certain fishing.
  • Commitments were made to establish systems that allow consumers to source sustainable fish.
  • New commitments were also made to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, and to curtail fishing subsidies that are working to deplete fish stocks.

African CSOs hold pre-AMCEN talks in Libreville

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Ahead of the 16th session of the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) scheduled for 12th to 16th of June 2017 in Gabon, an Africa-wide civil society workshop on the effective implementation of the Paris Agreement, SDGs and Agenda 2063 began on Friday, June 9, 2017 in Libreville.

Pre-AMCEN talks
Participants at the pre-AMCEN talks in Libreville

Organised by the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA) in collaboration with the World Resources Institute (WRI) and the Government of Gabon, the workshop is being attended by civil society groups from the five subregions of Africa.

The workshop aspires to provide an avenue for non-state actors in Africa to interrogate emerging global perspectives and actions on climate change and the implications of the Paris Agreement for Africa as well as the SDGs and Africa’s Agenda 2063.

According to Sam Ogallah of PACJA, “African civil society groups under the aegies of PACJA have vigorously engaged with different stakeholders on the urgent need to take forward and internationalise the Paris Agreement, implementation of the African Renewable Energy Initiative (AREI), the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Africa’s Agenda 2063.”

These engagements, according to him, are in recognition of civil society’s role in informing processes and influencing decisions taken by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) parties and African member states with a view to driving the implementation of the Paris Agreement.

“The Pre-AMCEN workshop offers us an opportunity to urge African governments to forge ahead with the implementation of the Paris Agreement regardless of United States’ exit from agreement as well as deepen our engagements with regards to the African Policy Dialogue on Climate Change, High Level Policy Dialogue on Sustainable Energy and Energy Access, African Parliamentary Roundtable on Climate Policy and Legislation, and the African Regional Post-COP22 Consultative Forum,” Ogallah added.

 

The AMCEN Process

This year’s AMCEN meeting comes after the 15th Session of AMCEN in Cairo, Egypt on March 2016; the UNFCCC-COP22 which held in Marrakech, Morocco in November 2016 and the just concluded UNFCCC-Bonn Climate Change Conference (SB46) which held in Bonn, May 2017.

The meeting provides an opportunity for African governments, represented by 55 African Ministers of Environment, to discuss challenges of the implementation of SDGs and Africa Agenda 2063 and a regional stocktaking of their performance at UNFCCC-COP22 and Bonn SB46 on the implementation of the Paris Agreement.

Other key focus at this meeting will be on the Africa Renewable Energy Initiative (AREI), Africa Adaptation Initiative (AAI) and other issues closely related with the Paris Agreement which came into force on November 4, 2016.

The 2017 Pre-AMCEN Consultative Workshop is being held alongside the UNEP Major Groups and Stakeholders Forum ahead of the main 16th Session of AMCEN from Saturday, June 10 to Sunday, June 11, 2017.

According to the organisers, hosting the African civil society workshop at the sidelines of the AMCEN meeting is a recognition of the need to strengthen non-state actors analysis and contributions to respond in a timely and resolute manner to these key issues, focusing in particular on the role they expected to play in influencing governments,  African Group of Negotiators (AGN) and related inter-governmental institutions such as African Union, UNEP, UNECA and Regional Integration Economic Blocs.

Courtesy: PAMACC News Agency

Radio Report: Nigerians urged to support government climate action

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Wealthy Nigerians have been called upon to support the Federal Government in implementing the country’s Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDC) towards executing the Paris Climate Change Agreement.
Former Deputy Vice Chancellor, University of Lagos, Professor Babajide Alo, who made the call during an interactive session with some environment journalists in Lagos, said Nigerians should be thankful to the present government for its decision to carry on with the Paris document regardless of the decision of US President Donald Trump to withdraw his country.
Correspondent Innocent Onoh reports…

GMOs: We’ll regulate biosafety sector based on science, not sentiments – Ebegba

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Director General, National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA), Dr. Rufus Ebegba, has said that the agency will not regulate the biosafety industry and the technology therein on sentiments’ grounds. Therefore, he adds, the organisation will not be deterred by campaigns unfavourable to its operations.

Rufus-Ebegba
Dr Rufus Ebegba, Director-General and CEO of the the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA). Photo credit: climatereporters.com

Ebegba made the submission on Friday, June 9, 2017 in Abuja while receiving executive members of the Northern Youth Council of Nigeria who came to pledge their support to the efforts of the NBMA to ensure the safety of food and the environment.

“We are prepared to regulate the technology based on science and not sentiments. We will not be detracted by any sponsored campaign seeking to misinform Nigerians. The Agency will continue to carry out its mandate as stipulated in the NBMA Act and shall be guided by evidence-based science,” Ebegba said.

He said the issue of Biosafety is purely scientific and that the NBMA was prepared in terms of manpower and facilities to regulate modern technology. He added that those calling for the scrapping of the Agency or the law setting up the Agency want to turn the country into a dumping ground for unwanted genetically modified organisms.

The NBMA boss further called on the media to be objective and avoid sensationalism in the reportage of national issues.

According to him, a group of Nigerians have constituted themselves to feed the media with unfounded information with the intent of causing panic and instilling fear in Nigerians about genetically modified organisms.

“Of late, a group parading themselves as representatives of civil societies and farmers have been going around leading protest for the repeal of the NBMA Act. There is no iota of truth in what they are saying. I call on the media to probe them and cross check the information they are reeling out.

“These same people were part and parcel of the processes that produced the Act passed by the National Assembly. So for them to turn around today and say the Act is weak and defective or we should scrap the Agency is unpatriotic,” the Director General added.

President of the NYCN, Comrade Isah Abubakar, called on Nigerians to support the Agency in its bid to protect and safeguard our health and environment.

Ebegba, who was later decorated with the council’s medal, was also presented an award of excellence for his doggedness in the discharge of his duties.

GMOs: Campaigners reiterate need for biosafety law overhaul

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Activists have once again called on the authorities to review the National Biosafety Management Act 2015 as, according to them, it cannot in its present form protect the interest of Nigerians.

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Participants at the workshop

The call formed one of the numerous resolutions reached at the close of Stakeholders Workshop on Food Sovereignty and Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) held in Abuja on Tuesday, June 6, 2017.

Organised by the Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), the daylong forum had “The Right to know: Food Sovereignty & Dangers of GMOs” as its theme. It was graced by farmers, scientists, academics, professionals, traders and representatives from the media and non-governmental organisations.

Essentially, the workshop explored issues related to food sovereignty and the rights of the public to have adequate information with regard to safety of the foods they eat.

“The Act leaves loopholes that can be easily manipulated to allow GMOs into the country. An example is the composition of its board which has promoters of modern agricultural biotechnology, including the National Biotechnology Development Agency (NABDA), as board members of NBMA,” the participants emphasised, adding:

“The fact that NABDA teamed up with commercial interests, quickly applied and obtained permist illustarates how this arrangement can breed conflict of interest and defeat the role of the agency as an umbiased regulator.”

The workshop also clamoured investment in independent research, calling on government to invest in research institutes and empower scientists especially those that are not tied to the biotech corporations.

“This will enable them to investigate both short term and future impact of GMOs on the Nigerian environment, her culture and the health of individuals.”

Other resolutions include:

 

Public Consultation

The needs of the people must be taken into consideration in policy and decision making especially in matters of food which affects everybody. Top down decisions may end up being counter productive. Majority of our farmers are family or smallholder farmers and they are in the best position to say the challenges they are faced with and are capable of sharing knowledge on how those can be overcome without compromising the health of the people.

 

Loans and grants should be made available to grassroots farmers

Loans, grants and extension services should be made available to farmers, especially those in the rural areas to boost agricultural activities. Increased access to land and tools are essential for improving productivity.

 

Support for Organic Agriculture

Stakeholders at this meeting agreed that Organic farming is a more sustainable solution for provision of safe and healthy food as it allows farmers to control and save their seeds, enriches the soil and preserves biodiversity. The organic sector of the Ministry of Agriculture should be empowered to provide extension service to farmner.

 

Seed banks

Organic seed banks should be created in our different ecological zones to safeguard our indigenous seeds and secure our biodiversity.

 

Provision of storage facilities and access to markets

Focus should be on reducing post-harvest losses by providing proper storage facilities and creating bridges between the farms and the markets. The problem is more of food wastage than of food shortages.

 

Restrict GMOs to Laboratories

GMOs should be restricted to laboratories. The recall of GMOs after they have contaminated the environment will be very slim. Restriction to research laboratories will protect Nigerians from the health and environmental impacts.

 

Security agencies to monitor and investigate the uprooting of immature crops

Investigation is required into the uprooting of young plants by unidentified agents in many regions and also the conflicts between famers and pastoralists should be urgently resolved.

 

GMOs violate human rights.

The issue of GMOs in Nigeria is beyond food. It represents an approach which neglects the rights of individuals to choose and control what they eat. The workshop resolved to demand respect for the rights of the public to safe food. It was also noted that the peculiarities of our context including our informal marketing systems do not allow for standard labelling of products as may work elsewhere and this exposes us to unque risks that cannot be ignored.

 

Land preparation

Farm produce are as good as the soil and the soil on the other hand is as good as the organic contents in it. To experience good yield and increase productivity, the soil must be carefully managed and protected from chemicals which destroy its natural composition. GMOs and their accompanying agrochemicals negatively impact on the quality of soils.

 

More agencies to regulate food and biosafety issues

It was also agreed that one agency cannot adequately address the issues of Biosafety in Nigeria. There is need for a strong collective effort to protect our interests, culture, environment and health.

 

Increased Awareness

The masses are largely unaware of the state of biosafety in the country. A majority do not know about what GMOs are about and how it affects them. One of the strong points made at this event was that of increasing awareness among the people of the dangers of GMOs. We agreed that this information should be spread especially in the rural areas and in languages that the people can easily understand.

 

Nulification of Permits and other deployments

The workshop resolved that the permits issued by NBMA for GMO varieties (Maize and Cotton) should be withdrawn. The failure of similar GM cotton variety in Burkina Faso and its being banned in that country two weeks before their approval in Nigeria was noted as a cogent reason for concern. The deployment of genetically modified cassava and beans in Nigeria was denounced and participants called for a halt on all fronts.

Italy funds solid waste feasibility study in Kenya’s Ngong town

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The Government of Italy is providing a soft loan to the Government of Kenya to improve solid waste management in Ngong town, a satellite urban centre of the capital city, Nairobi.

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L-R: Mauro Massoni, Ambassador of Italy to Kenya; The Government of Kenya representatives Alice Manyala and Geoffrey Sigia; and UN-Habitat Representative, Andrew Cox, during the signing of a contribution agreement towards improving solid waste in Ngong town. Photo credit: Julius Mwelu/UN-Habitat

The project will allow the introduction of sanitary landfill technology and resource recovery facilities at a new site in Ngong town that will replace the illegal dumpsite that is currently in use.

The United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat), based on its expertise and competencies related to its mandate, will over the coming months carry out a feasibility study including environmental and social impact assessments to inform the final design of the new waste management facility. UN-Habitat will also carry out environmental and social impact assessment studies for the decommissioning of the old dumpsite which was closed down by the Government of Kenya in 2016 for its failure to meet the recommended environmental standards.

The activities that will take place include:

  • A diagnostic baseline survey to summarise the current status of solid waste management in Kajiado County where Ngong is located;
  • An environmental and social impact assessment of the closure of the illegal dumpsite as well as a study of the technical feasibility, the applicable technology and financial feasibility of the closure;
  • An environmental and social impact assessment for the new dumpsite as well as a study of the technical feasibility, the applicable technology for resource recovery and financial feasibility;
  • Consultative workshops with stakeholders and public awareness campaigns on proper waste management; and
  • Development of a full size project document for the integrated solid waste management project in Ngong town with recycling plan to recover resources from waste.

The current illegal dumping site of Ngong Town receives over 40 tons of waste daily, 60% of which is organic waste that could be transformed into biogas energy. Some 130 families are working and earning a living from the dumpsite. The environmental damages from the illegal dumpsite are adverse, according to the UN-Habitat.

Vincent Kitio, the Chief of the Urban Energy Unit which will be responsible for the carrying out the feasibility study, said: “This joint project will bring about positive environmental change. The resource recovery facilities and sanitary landfill site will improve the current improper handling of waste and benefit local communities by turning recyclables into value. UN-Habitat will use this pilot project as a demonstration model and replicate the same to other towns and countries. We will capture lessons and good practices from this project and share them with other towns and countries”.

According to the UN-Habitat, it has continued to support cities and towns to meet their SDG goals, adding that Ruiru town in Kenya is a beneficiary of UN agency’s work in solid waste management.

“The dumping site in Ruiru was rehabilitated using the Fukuoka method. In Kisii town, 15 youth are working on recycling plastics and earning a living.”

Sweden supports Clean Seas Campaign to curb marine litter

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Litter in the seas is a major global environmental problem. In connection with the Ocean Conference in New York, Sweden is joining the Clean Seas Campaign, a global UN Environment initiative to reduce marine litter. Sweden will also provide financial support to UN Environment’s work on the issue.

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Plastic bottles on a beach. Photo credit: Bo Eide

“Oceans are the lifeblood of humanity, but they are being turned into rubbish dumps. We have a collective responsibility to act, and to act now. We need to turn the tide on plastic waste, protect biodiversity and keep the oceans rich and clean. It’s an investment in our own survival,” says Minister for the Environment Karolina Skog.

The Clean Seas Campaign was launched in January 2017. It aims to increase global awareness of the need to reduce marine litter. The need for measures differs in different parts of the world. Proper waste management infrastructure is lacking in some areas, while in others the challenge involves the general public’s awareness of the impact litter has on the environment.

“Sweden’s generosity and strong support will help us intensify our work and translate the science into global awareness and concrete action,” said Erik Solheim, Head of UN Environment.

 

Financial support                                 

Joining the Clean Seas Campaign means that Sweden will provide SEK 9 million in support, which is also support to UN Environment’s global efforts in the area.

Much of marine litter originates on land. It is therefore necessary to not focus solely on litter that has already ended up in the sea, but also on land-based pollution ‘from source to ocean’. Sweden is also investing a further SEK 5 million to support UN Environment in its efforts to tackle pollution from land-based sources.

 

Sweden’s measures to reduce marine litter

Sweden is already doing a great deal to tackle the problem of marine litter, including a national collection system, waste management technologies and a deposit-refund system for PET bottles. From 31 May, shops will be required to inform customers about the negative environmental impact of plastic carrier bags, and Sweden will soon introduce a ban on microplastics in cosmetic products intended to be rinsed off. The Swedish Government has recently announced new financial support for domestic actions, as well as appointed a state investigation on plastics.

World Oceans Day: West, Central Africa face food insecurity from overfishing

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Inger Andersen, Director-General of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), in a messeage to observe the World Oceans Day, discloses that a recent IUCN report shows that many species off the coast of western and central Africa are in danger, threatening food security in the region

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Overfishing is posing a threat to food security in West and Central Africa

Where did life on Earth begin? The fact is, no one really knows. Charles Darwin imagined a “warm little pond”, while some scientists today speculate about tide pools and hot springs. Increasingly, however, scientists are narrowing in on one hypothesis: that life began around a deep sea hydrothermal vent. So it is likely that the Ocean is our Garden of Eden.

Today, life on Earth continues to depend on the ocean. Covering almost three quarters of the Earth’s surface, the ocean contains 97% of its water and supports every life form that inhabits it. It produces over half of the oxygen in the atmosphere and regulates the Earth’s climate.

We humans, regardless of how far we may live from the coast, are intimately tied to the ocean. It provides billions of people around the world with protein-rich food, protection against disasters, and sources of income. The ocean is crucial to the global economy, supporting key industries such as fisheries, transport, trade and tourism. The ocean drives our creativity and innovation and awes us with its mysteries.

In many ways the ocean has shaped humanity as we know it. Throughout human history, it has been the foundation of our very existence and a driving force of our development.

We, in turn, have been the driving force of its destruction.

Our impact on the ocean is immense. Take fishing. Unsustainable fishing practices are decimating marine resources on our watch. According to a 2013 report by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, more than 30% of global fish stocks were classified as overfished.

Just today, IUCN announced the results of its latest IUCN Red List reports assessing marine biodiversity in Oceania and the Caribbean. The conclusions are clear: overfishing and the degradation of coral reefs in these regions are pushing many fish, including important food sources, towards extinction. Another recent IUCN report shows that many species off the coast of western and central Africa are also in danger, threatening food security in the region. More effectively managed protected areas, better regulation and enforcement of marine fisheries and improved monitoring of marine biodiversity must be part of the solution.

The effects of human-induced climate change are also shocking. The ocean has absorbed 30% of the anthropogenic emissions of CO2 and a staggering 93% of the added heat caused by human-driven changes to the atmosphere. As a result, the average temperature of the ocean has gone up, as has its acidity, producing devastating effects.

Coral reefs are among the most visible victims, with bleaching events rising to alarming levels. Additionally, a 2016 IUCN report revealed that marine species and ecosystems are already experiencing potentially irreversible damage. We are seeing changes in species growth, reproduction and distributions, which affect the abundance and diversity of marine life. Ecosystems such as mangroves, salt marshes and seagrasses are being destroyed, and their ability to act as natural carbon sinks and protect our shorelines – lost.

The Paris climate change agreement is our beacon of hope. Backed by almost all nations, it now needs rapid implementation for it to be effective. This is why the news that the US government would be pulled out of the Accord was so disconcerting. Thankfully, the response from other countries, and even regional and local governments, has been overwhelmingly positive. The need to stick to Paris is evident, and we can only hope that the White House follows this leadership and reconsiders its recent decision.

Then there’s plastic.

At least eight million tons of plastic end up in the ocean every year. Plastic has been found on the shorelines of all continents, causing severe injuries and deaths to marine species across the globe.

The calamity of plastic pollution conjures up images of empty water bottles and discarded plastic bags. But the reality is far more complex. Much plastic pollution is not even visible to the naked eye. Recent IUCN research demonstrates that tiny plastic particles from synthetic clothes and tyres are a very significant source of marine plastic pollution. This is hugely problematic because these particles are easily ingested by marine life.

Yet this damage that we inflict on marine life is also an incredible act of self-destruction. It poses a serious threat to our health: chemicals used in the production of plastic materials are known to be carcinogenic and to interfere with the body’s endocrine system, causing developmental, reproductive, neurological, and immune disorders. These contaminants enter the digestive systems of marine organisms that ingest them, and accumulate in the food web.

We must come together to find innovative ways to address the devastating problem of marine plastic pollution. Collective action is the only way forward. While each one of us – as a consumer of plastics – has a role to play, this will address only the most visible part of the problem. Governments and businesses must work together to address plastic pollution at every stage of a product’s value chain. Proper waste management and recycling efforts must be planned for at the earliest states of product development. Attacking plastic pollution is everybody’s responsibility and must not be pinned solely on the consumer.

Today, we are waking up to the consequences of the short-sightedness with which we have been treating our oceans. And the extent of our damage is telling us that we must act fast if we want to stand a chance of surviving.

In 2015, the world agreed on an ambitious plan to secure our ability to develop – and our planet’s capacity to sustain us. A healthy ocean is a central element to this plan. It underpins much of our sustainable development efforts, including those to eliminate poverty, hunger and ensure health and well-being for all. The United Nations Ocean Conference to support the implementation of Sustainable Development Goal 14, “Life below water”, currently taking place in New York, is a testament to how seriously the world is treating this challenge.

The ocean is very likely where we came from, and where our future begins. We need healthy oceans to help us tackle climate change. We need healthy oceans to feed our populations and fuel our economies. We need healthy oceans for their intrinsic value. And we need to understand that to destroy this ancestral home is to destroy ourselves.

$9.1m GCF facility boosts wetlands management in Peruvian communities

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The Green Climate Fund (GCF) has begun disbursing resources to the first project it approved in Peru’s Amazon, providing dual benefits by safeguarding the “planet’s lungs” and bolstering the resilience of indigenous people.

Peruvian comminities
The GCF facility will help indigenous communities manage their wetland resources in ways that avoid deforestation and the large-scale release of greenhouse gases stored in local peatlands

This $9.1 million climate finance initiative will help indigenous communities in the northern Peruvian province of Datem del Marañón manage their wetland resources in ways that avoid deforestation and the large-scale release of greenhouse gases stored in local peatlands.

GCF has transferred the first $1 million tranche of its approved $6.2 million grant to the Peruvian Trust Fund for National Parks and Protected Areas (PROFONANPE), the direct access Accredited Entity running the five-year project.

Following approval by the GCF Board in November 2015, PROFONANPE conducted an extensive consultation process over more than a year and a half with the indigenous communities participating in the project, as well as with their local, regional and national representatives. This allowed the project to fulfill conditions set by the GCF Board in order to receive its first disbursement.

The planet’s peatlands, most of which are found in South America, are a key piece in the climate conundrum. While they cover only three to five percent of Earth’s surface, they are estimated to hold more than 30 percent of the planet’s carbon stocks, in far denser quantities than aboveground stocks such as forests.

“The dual mitigation and adaptation focus of this Amazon basin project is mirrored in the global and local benefits it will provide,” said Alberto Paniagua, PROFONANPE’s Chief Executive Officer.

“This project will help indigenous communities improve their ability to manage wetland resources in the face of impending climate change, while better securing their livelihoods,” he explained. “At the same time, it will help stem emissions from the degradation of peatlands in this province, estimated to contain 3.78 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (tCO2 eq.).”

“The area of the project covers an important part of the world where peatlands remain almost intact,” he said. “We must protect the Amazon, as the life of the planet depends on this ecosystem. While its geographical area is shared mostly by Peru, Brazil and Colombia, in a sense we all own the Amazon as it is the planet’s lungs.”

Mr. Paniagua also pointed out that the best way to prevent deforestation and peatland degradation in the Amazon is to support indigenous people to integrate their way of living into the local economies with neighboring communities, while maintaining their traditions and ancestral rights in their territory.

This includes their harvesting of palm trees that thrive in these wetland areas in ways that keep the trees standing. The sustainable harvesting of fruit from palm trees can bring considerable financial rewards, as the oil is used globally in food ingredients, hair and skin products and other commodities.

“We need to find new ways to support indigenous people, as some are already feeling the brunt of climate change from the loss of land through the changing flow of rivers and continuous threats to deforestation in their territory,” said Mr. Paniagua.

“This project will also encourage indigenous people to stay living in these areas as custodians of the land.”

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