Strategic
Plan: future evaluation of progress
The Conference of the
Parties,
Review and
evaluation
Recognizing the need to: (i)
facilitate assessment of progress towards the 2010 target, and
communication of this assessment; (ii) promote coherence among the
various programmes of work of the Convention; and (iii) provide a
flexible framework within which national and regional targets may
be set, and indicators identified, where so desired by Parties; as
well as (iv) the need for a mechanism to review implementation of
the Convention,
Recalling the statement in the
Johannesburg Plan of Implementation that a more efficient and
coherent implementation of the three objectives of the Convention
and the achievement by 2010 of a significant reduction in the
current rate of loss of biological diversity will require the
provision of new and additional financial and technical resources
to developing countries,
1.
Decides to develop a framework to enhance the evaluation of
achievements and progress in the implementation of the Strategic
Plan and, in particular, its mission, to achieve a significant
reduction in the current rate of biodiversity loss at global,
regional and national levels. The framework includes the
following focal areas:
(a) Reducing
the rate of loss of the components of biodiversity,
including: (i) biomes, habitats and ecosystems; (ii) species
and populations; and (iii) genetic diversity;
(b)
Promoting sustainable use of biodiversity;
(c)
Addressing the major threats to biodiversity, including those
arising from invasive alien species, climate change, pollution, and
habitat change;
(d)
Maintaining ecosystem integrity, and the provision of goods and
services provided by biodiversity in ecosystems, in support of
human well-being;
(e)
Protecting traditional knowledge, innovations and
practices;
(f) Ensuring
the fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising out of the use
of genetic resources; and
(g)
Mobilizing financial and technical resources, especially for
developing countries, in particular least developed countries and
small island developing States among them, and countries with
economies in transition, for implementing the Convention and the
Strategic Plan;
Goals and
sub-targets will be established, and indicators identified, for
each of the focal areas. The goals and sub-targets will complement
the existing goals of the Strategic Plan; [75]/
2. For
the purposes of assessing progress towards the target to achieve by
2010, a significant reduction in the current rate of biodiversity
loss, defines biodiversity loss as the long-term or
permanent qualitative or quantitative reduction in components of
biodiversity and their potential to provide goods and services, to
be measured at global, regional and national levels;
Indicators for assessing progress towards,
and communicating the 2010 target at the global level
3. In
order to assess progress at the global level towards the 2010
target, and to communicate effectively trends in biodiversity
related to the three objectives of the Convention, agrees
that a limited number of trial indicators, for which data are
available from existing sources, be developed and used in
reporting, inter alia, through the Global Biodiversity
Outlook. A balanced set of indicators should be identified or
developed, according to the principles for choosing indicators
identified by the Expert Group on Indicators and Monitoring
(UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/9/10) referred to in decision VII/8, on monitoring
and indicators, to assess and communicate trends in the focal areas
listed in paragraph 1. The global application of those
indicators as well as the assessment of the progress towards the
2010 target should not be used to evaluate the level of
implementation of the Convention in individual Parties or
regions. As far as is feasible, the indicators should be
identified or developed in such as way that:
(a) The same
indicators may be used at the global, regional, national and local
levels as tools for the implementation of the Convention and of
national biodiversity strategies and action plans, where so desired
by Parties;
(b) The
indicators relate to one or more of the various Programmes of Work
of the Convention;
(c) The
indicators should take into consideration relevant Millennium
Development Goals and indicators developed by other relevant
international processes; and
(d) Existing
data sets are used.
Full
use should be made of the report of the London meeting
(UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/9/INF/9), and the notes by the Executive
Secretary: on proposed biodiversity indicators relevant to the 2010
target (UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/9/INF/26); on using existing
processes as building blocks in reporting on the 2010 target
(UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/9/INF/27), on proposed global indicators
(UNEP/CBD/COP/7/INF/33), and on monitoring and indicators
(UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/9/10);
4.
Agrees that the
indicators to be tested, identified or developed, are listed in
annex I to the present decision. Indicators for immediate
testing are listed in column B of annex I; indicators requiring
further development are listed in column C of annex I;
5.
Requests the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and
Technological Advice at its tenth or eleventh meetings to evaluate
information on the changes in trends and status of biodiversity,
particularly the current rate of biodiversity loss at the global
level inter alia by reviewing a draft of the Second Global
Biodiversity Outlook;
6.
Requests the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and
Technological Advice at its tenth or eleventh meetings, with the
assistance of an ad hoc technical expert group, subject to the
availability of the necessary voluntary contributions to:
(a) Review
the use of the indicators listed in annex I, column B, to the
present decisions, inter
alia, by reviewing a draft of the
second Global Biodiversity Outlook;
(b) Identify
or develop indicators listed in annex I, column C, to the present
decision, ensuring that the full set of indicators is limited in
number;
and
report on the results to the Conference of the Parties at its
eighth meeting;
7.
Requests the Ad Hoc Open-ended Working Group on Access and
Benefit-sharing and the Ad Hoc Open-ended Inter-Sessional Working
Group on Article 8(j) and Related Provisions of the Convention on
Biological Diversity, respectively, to explore the need and
possible options for indicators for access to genetic resources and
in particular for the fair and equitable sharing of benefits
arising from the utilization of genetic resources, and associated
innovations, knowledge and practices of indigenous and local
communities, and for the protection of innovations, knowledge and
practices of indigenous and local communities, and to report
the results to the Conference of the Parties at its eighth
meeting;
8.
Requests the Executive Secretary, with the assistance of the
World Conservation Monitoring Centre of the United Nations
Environment Programme and other relevant international
organizations, to
(a) Prepare
the second Global Biodiversity Outlook for publication prior to the
eighth meeting of the Conference of the Parties following peer
review and review by the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical
and Technological Advice at its tenth or eleventh meeting.
The second Global Biodiversity Outlook should provide an assessment
of progress towards the 2010 biodiversity target at the global
level and communicate effectively trends in biodiversity related to
the three objectives of the Convention, based on the focal areas
listed in paragraph 1 of the present decision, and making use of
the indicators listed in annex I below that are successfully
developed and tested, information provided in the national
reports, as well as information provided by international
organizations;
(b) Prepare
the necessary background documentation to assist the Subsidiary
Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice in the work
outlined in paragraph 6 above;
9.
Invites related conventions, assessment processes and
relevant organizations to contribute reports and information that
assist the monitoring of progress towards the 2010
targets;
10.
Invites the World Conservation Monitoring Centre of the
United Nations Environment Programme to support the Secretariat in
facilitating the compilation of information necessary for reporting
on achievement on the 2010 target;
Goals and sub-targets to facilitate coherence among
the programmes of work, and to provide a flexible framework for
national targets
11.
Decides to establish, goals and sub- targets for each of the
focal areas identified in paragraph 1 above, as set out in annex II
to the present decision, in order to clarify the 2010 global
biodiversity target adopted by decision VI/26, help assess progress
towards the target, and promote coherence among the programmes of
work of the Convention. Such goals would complement the
existing goals of the Strategic Plan;
12
Requests the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and
Technological Advice at its tenth or eleventh meetings
to:
(a) Review,
and, as necessary, further refine the goals and sub-targets,
ensuring that they are linked to relevant Millennium Development
Goals, initiatives of the World Summit on Sustainable Development,
and the goals articulated by other relevant international
processes;
(b) Identify
indicators for the sub-targets, where possible, by association with
the indicators provided in annex I to the present
decision;
(c) Refine
proposals for the integration of outcome-oriented targets proposals
for the integration of outcome-oriented targets into the programmes
of work of inland water biodiversity and of marine and coastal
biodiversity, according to the framework in annex II and using the
approach set out in annex III to the present decision, identifying
more precise targets, including, as appropriate, quantitative
elements and decides that outcome oriented targets are a key
priority for the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and
Technological Advice;
(d) When the
programmes of work of the Convention, are reviewed according to the
multi-year programme of work of the Conference of the Parties
develop recommendations for the integration of outcome-oriented
targets into each of the thematic programmes of work, according to
the framework in annex II and using the approach set out in annex
III to the present decision, identifying more precise targets,
including, as appropriate, quantitative elements;
13.
Requests the Executive Secretary:
(a) To
prepare proposals for the integration of goals and targets into the
programmes of work when these programmes are due for review
according to the multi-year programme of work of the Conference of
the Parties, taking into account that these goals and targets
should be viewed as flexible framework within which national and/or
regional targets may be developed, according to national priorities
and capacities; and
(b) To make
full use of the clearing‑house mechanism in promoting
technical cooperation to achieve the 2010 targets and facilitating
information exchange on progress made;
National implementation and national biodiversity
strategies and action plans
14.
Emphasizes that the goals and targets referred to in
paragraph 12 above should be viewed as a flexible framework within
which national and/or regional targets may be developed, according
to national priorities and capacities, and taking into account
differences in diversity between countries;
15.
Invites Parties and Governments to develop national and/or
regional goals and targets, and, as appropriate, to incorporate
them into relevant plans, programmes and initiatives, including
national biodiversity strategies and action plans;
16.
Invites Parties and
Governments to use existing national indicators or to establish
national indicators using the tools (UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/9/10) referred
to in decision VII/8, on monitoring and indicators, and according
to their national needs and priorities, to assess progress towards
their national/and or regional targets;
17.
Emphasizes the need for
capacity-building, especially in developing countries, in
particular the least developed countries and the small island
developing States among them, and countries with economies in
transition, in order to enable them to implement activities to
achieve and monitor progress towards the goals and
targets;
18.
Invites Parties, Governments, international and funding
organizations to provide adequate and timely support for the
implementation of activities to achieve and monitor progress
towards the goals and targets to developing country Parties, in
particular the least developed countries and small island
developing States among them, and Parties with economies in
transition, as appropriate;
19.
Requests the Executive Secretary to continue to explore ways
to expand active support for developing country Parties in
particular least developed countries and small island developing
States among them, and Parties with economies in transition, where
appropriate, in the development, revision and implementation of
national biodiversity strategies and action plans. This process
should include the commitment and resources of civil society in the
development and implementation of national biodiversity strategies
and action plans;
20.
Emphasizes that national biodiversity strategies and action
plans, as the primary mechanisms for the implementation of the
Convention and the Strategic Plan, should be developed or reviewed
with due regard to the relevant aspects of the four goals of the
Strategic Plan, and the goals established by this decision, to
enable greater contribution to the achievement of the 2010 target,
consistent with national needs and priorities; and invites Parties
to incorporate the goals, as appropriate, into the national
biodiversity strategies and action plans when these are
revised;
21.
Invites developed country Parties continue to provide
support to developing country Parties, in particular least
developed countries and small island developing States among them,
and Parties with economies in transition , as appropriate, to
develop national-level indicators;
22.
Requests the Executive Secretary to report to Conference of
the Parties at its eighth meeting on the work required by decision
V/20, paragraph 41, to allow further work to be undertaken to
identify ways to support the review by Parties of national
implementation;
Review of implementation of the
Convention
23.
Recognizing the need to establish a process, for evaluating,
reporting and reviewing the Strategic Plan 2002‑2010,
decides to allocate adequate time in subsequent meetings of
the Conference of the Parties and the Subsidiary Body on
Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice, as well as ad hoc
open-ended Working Groups, as appropriate, and establishes
an Ad Hoc Open-ended Working Group on Review of Implementation of
the Convention, subject to the availability of the necessary
voluntary contributions, to consider progress in the implementation
of the Convention and the Strategic Plan and achievements leading
up to the 2010 target in line with the multi-year programme of work
for the Conference of the Parties (decision VII/31), to review the impacts and effectiveness of
existing processes under the Convention, such as meetings of the
Conference of the Parties, the Subsidiary Body on
Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice, national focal points and the Secretariat, as
part of the overall process for improving the operations of the
Convention and implementation of the Strategic Plan, and to
consider ways and means of identifying and overcoming obstacles to
the effective implementation of the Convention;
24.
Invites Parties, other Governments and
relevant organizations to submit views on these issues to the
Executive Secretary, and requests the Executive Secretary to
compile and make available these views for consideration by
the Ad Hoc Open-ended Working Group on
Review of Implementation of the Convention;
25. Requests the
Executive Secretary to participate in processes arising from the
twenty‑second session of the Governing Council of the United
Nations Environment Programme relating to consideration of the
development and establishment of an interGovernmental strategic
plan for implementation support, linked to the outcome of the
international environmental governance process, to ensure that it
will contribute to the implementation of the Convention;
26.
Decides to address explicitly the need to provide focused
support and improve existing support mechanisms where obstacles to
implementation of national biodiversity strategies and action plans
have been identified, particularly when considering the results of
the evaluation of progress in achievement the goals and mission of
the Strategic Plan as well as the goals and sub-targets established
in this decision
27.
Recognizing in the development of better methods to evaluate
progress in the implementation of the Convention that consideration
could be given to making full use of the experiences of other
multilateral environmental agreements, such as the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change, requests the
Executive Secretary to initiate action as a follow-up to
paragraph 41 of decision V/20,.
Annex I
PROVISIONAL INDICATORS FOR
ASSESSING PROGRESS TOWARDS THE 2010 BIODIVERSITY
TARGET
A: Focal
area
|
B: Indicator for
immediate testing
|
C: Possible indicators for development by SBSTTA
or Working Groups
|
Status and trends of the components of biological
diversity
|
Trends in extent of selected biomes, ecosystems and
habitats
|
|
|
Trends in abundance and distribution of selected
species
|
|
|
|
Change in status of threatened species (Red List
indicator under development)
|
|
|
Trends in genetic diversity of domesticated animals,
cultivated plants, and fish species of major socioeconomic
importance
|
|
Coverage of protected areas
|
|
Sustainable use
|
|
Area of forest, agricultural and aquaculture
ecosystems under sustainable management
|
|
|
Proportion of products derived from sustainable
sources
|
Threats to biodiversity
|
Nitrogen deposition
|
|
|
|
Numbers and cost of alien invasions
|
Ecosystem integrity and ecosystem goods and
services
|
Marine trophic index
|
Application to freshwater and possibly other
ecosystems
|
|
|
Connectivity/fragmentation of ecosystems
|
|
|
Incidence of human-induced ecosystem
failure
|
|
|
Health and well-being of people living in
biodiversity-based-resource dependent communities
|
|
Water quality in aquatic ecosystems
|
|
|
|
Biodiversity used in food and medicine
|
Status of traditional knowledge, innovations and
Practices
|
Status and trends of linguistic diversity and numbers
of speakers of indigenous languages
|
Further indicators to be identified by
WG-8j
|
Status of access and benefit-sharing
|
|
Indicator to be identified by WG-ABS
|
Status of resource transfers
|
Official development assistance provided in support of
the Convention (OECD-DAC-Statistics Committee)
|
|
|
|
Indicator for technology transfer
|
Annex
II
Provisional
framework for goals and targets
Protect the components of
biodiversity
Goal 1. Promote the
conservation of the biological diversity of ecosystems,
habitats and biomes
Target 1.1: At least 10% of each of the world's
ecological regions effectively conserved.
Target 1.2: Areas of particular importance to
biodiversity protected
Goal 2. Promote the
conservation of species diversity
Target 2.1: Restore, maintain, or reduce the decline
of populations of species of selected taxonomic groups
Target 2.2: Status of threatened species
improved.
Goal 3. Promote the
conservation of genetic diversity
Target 3.1: Genetic diversity of crops,
livestock, and of harvested species of trees, fish and wildlife and
othervaluable species conserved, and associated indigenous and
local knowledge maintained.
Promote sustainable use
Goal 4. Promote
sustainable use and consumption.
Target 4.1: Biodiversity-based products derived from
sources that are sustainably managed, andProduction areas managed
consistent with the conservation of biodiversity.
Target 4.2 Unsustainable consumption, of biological
resources, or that impacts upon biodiversity, reduced
Target 4.3:No species of wild flora or fauna
endangered by international trade
Address threats to biodiversity
Goal 5. Pressures
from habitat loss, land use change and degradation, and
unsustainable water use, reduced.
Target 5.1: Rate of loss and degradation of natural
habitats decreased
Goal 6. Control
threats from invasive alien species
Target 6.1: Pathways for major potential alien
invasive species controlled.
Target 6. 2: Management plans in place for major alien
species that threaten ecosystems, habitats or species.
Goal 7. Address
challenges to biodiversity from climate change, and
pollution
Target 7.1: Maintain and enhance resilience of the
components of biodiversity to adapt to climate change
Target 7.2: Reduce pollution and its impacts on
biodiversity
Maintain goods and services from
biodiversity to support human well-being
Goal 8. Maintain
capacity of ecosystems to deliver goods and services and support
livelihoods
Target 8.1: Capacity of ecosystems to deliver goods
and services maintained.
Target 8.2: biological resources that support
sustainable livelihoods, local food security and health care,
especially of poor people maintained
Protect traditional knowledge, innovations
and practices
Goal 9 Maintain
socio-cultural diversity of indigenous and local
communities
Target 9s.1 Protect traditional knowledge,
innovations and practices
Target 9.2: Protect the rights of indigenous and local
communities over their traditional knowledge, innovations and
practices, including their rights to benefit sharing
Ensure the fair and equitable sharing of
benefits arising out of the use of genetic resources
Goal 10. Ensure the fair and
equitable sharing of benefits arising out of the use of genetic
resources
Target 10.1: All transfers of genetic resources are in
line with the Convention on Biological Diversity, the International
Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture and
other applicable agreements.
Target 10.2: Benefits arising from the commercial and
other utilization of genetic resources shared with the countries
providing such resources
Ensure provision of adequate
resources
Goal 11: Parties
have improved financial, human, scientific, technical and
technological capacity to implement the Convention
[76]/
Target 11.1: New and
additional financial resources are transferred to developing
country Parties, to allow for the effective implementation of their
commitments under the Convention, in accordance with
Article 20.
Target 11.2: Technology
is transferred to developing country Parties, to allow for the
effective implementation of their commitments under the Convention,
in accordance with its Article 20, paragraph 4.
Annex
III
General Approach for
the integration of targets into the programmes of work of the
Convention
The
following steps would be carried out: for each thematic programme
of work, and for other programmes of work, as
appropriate:
(a)
Vision, mission and outcome-oriented
targets:
(i)
Identification of the overall vision (or long-term goal) to be
ultimately achieved for the biome/issue covered by the programme of
work, consistent with the Purpose of the Strategic Plan;
(ii)
Identification of a 2010 outcome-oriented global target specific to
the scope of the programme of work and consistent with the mission
of the Strategic Plan;
(iii)
Identification of a limited number of outcome-oriented targets
related to the status and trends of biodiversity and its
components, threats to biodiversity, and goods and services
provided by biodiversity and ecosystems within the scope of the
programme of work. Where appropriate, quantitative sub-targets
should be established. The targets should be assigned to a number
of goals according to the proposed headings in annex I above.
Where possible the sub-targets of annex II above should be
incorporated into the work programmes without modification to avoid
unnecessary proliferation of targets. Where appropriate,
identification of targets could draw upon the approach used to
develop the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation. However,
this process does not imply that all targets in annex I and the
Global Strategy for Plant Conservation should be applied in every
programme of work. Rather, targets may highlight broad strategic
issues and/or particularly urgent priority issues, and each target
should be associated with one or more indicators, which can draw
upon existing data.
(b)
Relationship between the programme of work,
its targets, and other processes:
(i)
Examination of how the programme of work contributes to particular
Millennium Development Goals and associated targets;
(ii) A brief
analysis of how the programme of work, and its targets, relates to
the elements of the Plan of Implementation of the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, categorizing such elements as
follows:
-
Elements to be integrated into the
programme of work (these elements should be fully within the scope
of the programme of work), specifying which of these represent
outcome-oriented biodiversity related targets;
-
Elements which complement the goals
of the programme of work; and
-
Elements representing goals to which
the programme of work contributes;
(iii) A brief
analysis of how the programme of work, and its targets, relates to
the objectives, plans and targets of other multilateral
environmental agreements and other relevant agreements, using the
same categorization as in subparagraph (b) (ii)
above;
(c)
Intermediate output- or process-oriented
targets, milestones and deadlines for the activities of the
programme of work:
Identification of a number of process- or output-oriented targets,
milestones and deadlines, relating to the specific objectives,
programme elements, and/or activities of the programme of work,
according to the structure and needs of each programme of
work.
[75]/
These are:
Goal 1: The Convention is
fulfilling its leadership role in international biodiversity
issues.
Goal 2: Parties have improved
financial, human, scientific, technical, and technological
capacity to implement the Convention.
Goal 3: National biodiversity
strategies and action plans and the integration of biodiversity
concerns into relevant sectors serve as an effective framework for
the implementation of the objectives of the Convention.
Goal 4: There is a better
understanding of the importance of biodiversity and of the
Convention, and this has led to broader engagement across society
in implementation.
[76]/
This is the existing goal 2 of the Strategic Plan of the Convention
on Biological Diversity.