New body aims to promote economic as well as ethical
side of biodiversity:
Why protecting the world's wildlife is good for our wallets
by Michael McCarthy
A new world body on wildlife and ecosystems protection being set up
by the UN must avoid blaming developing nations, where most of the
world's biodiversity loss is occurring, says a top British scientist.
Over consumption by rich western nations is as big a driver of global
environmental degradation as the rapidly growing populations of
developing countries, says Professor Bob Watson, a leading figure in
setting up the Inter governmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem
Services (IPBES).
The new body - modelled on the UN's Inter governmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) - will assess how and why the natural world is
being degraded, what it will cost society, and what can be done to halt
the process.
But it must avoid rows between rich and poor countries, says
Professor Watson, an ex-head of the IPCC, who is Chief Scientific
Adviser to Britain's Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.
"If they think this is just the white world, the developed world,
telling them what to do, that'll be the end of it... The climate debate
has been, 'you rich countries got rich by using cheap fossil fuels, and
now you're telling us not to use them.'
We must not get into that," he said. Regional assessments of
biodiversity problems must be "owned" by the regions concerned, he said.
So if there is a regional biodiversity assessment of Latin America,
scientists from Latin America will carry it out, not foreign scientists.
Professor Watson will play a key role at a Nairobi meeting today
which will decide how the new body can be formed, probably next year.
Hopes are high that the IPBES might help halt the loss of global
wildlife and habitats.
Influential
The IPBES is based on the increasingly influential concept of
ecosystem services, that forests, rivers or peat bogs are not just parts
of the natural world, but produce oxygen, provide food and store
atmospheric carbon, vital in the fight against climate change.
The new body, which all the major global nations back, follows on the
heels of two reports: the Millennium Ecosystems Assessment of 2005,
which showed that most of the world's ecosystems are in serious decline,
and the report on The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity released
last year, which estimated that nature and the services it provides are
worth trillions of dollars annually to society.
The IPBES will aim to show the value of biodiversity both in ethical
or social terms, and in economic terms. Professor Watson is seen as the
ideal person to oversee the UN's biodiversity body, as he has led
international environmental assessments of all major global concerns:
ozone depletion, climate change, ecosystem change and agriculture and
development.
In fact, the 63-year-old atmospheric chemist, from Romford, east
London, who still speaks with an East End accent, is the world's leading
authority on policy responses to global change.
Yet he is far from being a household name in Britain since he spent
34 years of his career in the US, where he held senior positions in
NASA, the Clinton White House, and the World Bank. He chaired the IPCC
from 1997 to 2002.
He says global ecosystems face a "headlong assault" from five drivers
- land conversion (such as deforestation), over-exploitation (such as
over fishing), the introduction of exotic species, pollution, and
climate change.
And he does not think climate change can be stopped at a rise of two
degrees Celsius, which is the goal of most world climate policy. "We had
better be prepared to adapt to four degrees," the professor commented.
Ecosystem
What the ecosystem is worth Ask yourself what human society gets from
a forest and the obvious answer is wood. Another obvious answer might be
wildlife. Or perhaps, a pleasurable stroll. But that doesn't begin to
list the benefits provided to us by a great aggregation of trees.
Forests such as the Amazon are ecosystems which provide the world
with tremendous services that are essential to the continuance of human
life.
These include vast amounts of oxygen, and fresh water, and a
beneficial climate, as well as the storing of billions of tonnes of the
carbon dioxide which human industry is pumping into the atmosphere and
which is causing the world to heat up, with potentially disastrous
consequences. And at last, the real value of these ecosystem services is
being realised.
Last year the UN released a ground-breaking report on The Economics
of Ecosystems and Biodiversity which put monetary value on the benefits
the natural world provides us with. It runs into trillions of dollars
annually, the report said.
For example, it suggested that the value of human welfare benefits
provided by coral reefs was up to £109bn annually.
The destruction of coral reefs is not only damaging to marine life
but also poses risks to communities, the report said. Some 30 million
people around the world rely on reef-based resources for food
production, and for their livelihoods.
In another example, the report said that the economic value of insect
pollinators, such as honey bees, in global crop production was £134bn a
year.
Damage to natural capital including forests, wetlands and grasslands
was valued at between $2trn and $4.5trn annually. But these figures are
not included in economic data such as GDP, or in corporate accounts.
Now the hope is that with the IPBES, they will be taken into account,
and a true picture of how much biodiversity loss is costing the world
will emerge.
Courtesy: The Independent |