Implementation of the NBSAP
The content of this biodiversity profile is still draft. The text below has been prepared by SCBD and remains subject to final approval by the Party concerned.
Panama’s first NBSAP was completed in 2000. The country is currently revising and updating the NBSAP, including developing national targets, with the intention to complete this process in 2015. The recommendations of the National Biodiversity Policy, adopted by decree in 2008, which emphasize the sustainable use of biodiversity for socioeconomic development, are being taken into account in the revision, as is the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020 and its Aichi Targets.
The new NBSAP will address in particular issues absent in the first NBSAP (2000) on: integrating biodiversity values (Target 2); creating incentives and removing harmful subsidies (Target 3); sustainable consumption and production (Target 4); full implementation of the programme of work on protected areas, including increased protection for and connectivity of landscapes/seascapes (Target 11); and restoring and safeguarding ecosystems that provide essential services (Target 14). The NBSAP development process will also look closely at strengthening climate resilience, as well as integrating climate resilience within systematic spatial planning efforts already underway. Sectoral mainstreaming, the costing of NBSAP implementation, resource mobilization, capacity needs and national CHM development are among other issues to be addressed.
Actions taken to achieve the 2020 Aichi Biodiversity Targets
The content of this biodiversity profile is still draft. The text below has been prepared by SCBD and remains subject to final approval by the Party concerned.
To date, significant progress has been made towards achieving Target 11 (Protected Areas) and Target 16 (Nagoya Protocol). Some initial progress has been made towards achieving Target 1 (awareness increased), Target 2 (biodiversity values integrated), Target 4 (sustainable consumption and production), Target 5 (habitat loss halved or reduced), Target 6 (sustainable management of marine living resources), and Target 7 (sustainable agriculture, aquaculture and forestry). On the other hand, little or no progress has been made towards Target 3 (incentives reformed), Target 15 (ecosystems restored and resilience enhanced), Target 17 (NBSAPs) and Target 20 (Financial Resources).
Support mechanisms for national implementation (legislation, funding, capacity-building, coordination, mainstreaming, etc.)
The content of this biodiversity profile is still draft. The text below has been prepared by SCBD and remains subject to final approval by the Party concerned.
The provisions of the new NBSAP will be mainstreamed in the new National Strategy for the Environment 2014-2018 which is also currently in preparation.
In recognition of the importance of the Panamanian biological corridor to the existence of many species, 7 Central American countries pledged to help preserve this forested "bridge" by launching the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor initiative in 1997.
To address the threat of invasive alien species, Panama has initiated a process aimed at developing a national legal framework and a national strategy for preventing and managing the introduction of harmful aquatic organisms and pathogens in ballast water and sediments from ships.
To address the rapid decline of amphibian populations due to chytridiomycosis, ex situ conservation has been used as an immediate measure. Two successful initiatives have been implemented towards the recovery of these populations, resulting in the creation of the El Valle Amphibian Conservation Center and the Amphibian Rescue Center. Panama hopes that these models can be replicated worldwide to deal with this threat. Conservation plans have been developed for other threatened species, such as the Harpy eagle (
Harpia harpyja, Linnaeus) and jaguar (
Panthera onca, Linnaeus).
As part of the REDD + initiative, efforts have been taken towards acquiring a deeper understanding of the causes of deforestation and forest degradation in the country. This has resulted in making available the elements necessary to design a national strategy on reducing deforestation and forest degradation, conserving forest resources, sustainably managing forests and increasing carbon stocks.
Since 2011, the Panama Canal Authority has been implementing a reforestation programme, including environmental economic incentives for communities, aimed at promoting the proper management of natural resources. A positive trend towards the recovery of forest cover has been achieved, as well as towards improved living conditions for the people living in the Panama Canal watershed areas.
Panama is a Party to the Nagoya Protocol on ABS.
In 2013, the National Environment Authority established the sectoral committee on environmental biosafety, pursuant to Law 48 adopted in 2002 on the creation of the National Biosafety Commission for genetically modified organisms.
Mechanisms for monitoring and reviewing implementation
The content of this biodiversity profile is still draft. The text below has been prepared by SCBD and remains subject to final approval by the Party concerned.
Biological inventories are currently being conducted for the proposed national biodiversity monitoring system, with activities facilitated through the implementation of the National Environment Authority’s Panama Atlantic Mesoamerican Biological Corridor Project (CBMAP-II/ANAM).