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Entries in biodiversity (7)

Sunday
Mar272011

Counting what counts

There's a small group of biodiversity specialists, friends and collaborators who meet occasionally in Wales to discuss ways of germinating a little more sanity in this mad world. I recently asked them to mull over a few questions about priorities for education, government and change - their responses are below:

Making the Outdoors Everyday
Our proposal is that every child gets an experience of nature every day as part of normal, everyday educational practice. Our underlying assumption is that through being allowed and encouraged to be outside on an every day / everyday basis, Wales would grow generations of people for who knew  through lived experience that biodiversity is important (just as we currently "know" that economics is important... even if we are not experts in exactly how economic systems operate). We think there would be multiple immediate benefits from this, ranging from greater levels of physical activity, through to eco-therapeutic effects, ecosystemic knowing and cultivating a broader context from and through which we are informed and make decisions.

We would push it further and say that ALL education in Wales, irrespective of subject, age or stage needs to include learning outdoors on a daily basis in ways that are fun, enjoyable and deeply experiential. This means including teachers and educators, NGOs, police (and challenging the perceptions of young people outdoors are a nuisance). We believe that this movement is necessarily transdisciplinary and that it landowners, farmers, gardeners, biologists and so on. We believe that this movement is necessarily transdisciplinary and that it gets to the heart of the matter of us as a species being a part of the natural world and not apart from it.

In terms of the Sustainability Innovation event, we would like to challenge young participants to come up with the implications of this movement relative to the three themes of waste, travel and food. We want to hear from young people themselves what their imaginations tell them about all the ways kids and be and learn outside every day.

In terms of the PhD students, we want to see large scale longitudinal research into making the outdoors everyday. We also want to see appreciative inquiry examples of where this work is already being done
well in Wales and across the world.

In terms of the WAG projects, that could seek to embed practical innovation for sustainability into the everyday curriculm, we ask: why wouldn't you want this? And how will WAG use it's collective imagination to make a move on this front.

Game on.

 

 

Thursday
Feb102011

Putting a price on nature

Andrew Winston: Dow Asks, Whats the Business Case for Protecting Nature?.

First we measured carbon, and now cats, catfish, caterpillars and catkins.

Watching the vision, application and hiccups of putting a price on things previously seen as having no monetary value is an educational experience. Multiple prices for carbon set by different agencies trading the European Emissions Trading Scheme, and others in the carbon offset business or Clean Development Mechanism were all set with good intent -  yet they conspire to prevent high levels of capital investment to be made, as risks and return need to be mitigated. Fixing a stable, predictable price for this single atom is important, yet proving difficult to manage.

Far more complex will be the process of putting a price on the arrangements of the handful atoms - carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen & phosphorus - on which the majority of life on this planet is built. Until we find a way of measuring what we value, no matter how complex or messy that't going to be, we risk sticking with valuing what we can easily measure - index figures such as the crude yardstick of GDP. Pavan Sukhdev's work on TEEB, The Economics of Ecosystems & Biodiversity, is leading the way and he'll need as many shoulders as possible pushing in the same direction if we're to persuade business leaders and policy makers that measuring the value of the life systems supporting us is really worthwhile. We need to start behaving as though we really valued our life support systems, without waiting for the markets or accountants to tell us what matters.

As a start point, do a couple of things. Find out enough about what's happening to our biodiversity and the TEEB project to be comfortable in conversation, then talk to one or two people a week about it. 

Thursday
Oct072010

Getting living done

The Guardian are part of an important campaign to raise awareness and action on our contiunued loss of, and threat to biodiversity. This is the letter that the Guardian's editor, Alan Rushbridger, sent to Caroline Spelman, the UK's Environment Minister:

UK 1

Monday
May172010

Global Biodiversity Outlook

The third update of the Global Biodiversity Outlook (GBO) has just been published, and makes sober reading. Here are some of the highlights, collated by Tara Garnett from the Food & Cimate Research Network:

GBO-3 finds that the target agreed by the world’s Governments in 2002, “to achieve by 2010 a significant reduction of the current rate of biodiversity loss at the global, regional and national level as a contribution to poverty alleviation and to the benefit of all life on Earth”, has not been met.

The Outlook warns that natural systems that support economies, lives and livelihoods across the planet are at risk of rapid degradation and collapse, unless there is swift, radical and creative action to conserve and sustainably use the variety of life on Earth.  It says that we may be at risk of reaching ‘tipping points’ after which  ecosystems shift to alternative, less productive states from which it may be difficult or impossible to recover.

Potential tipping points analyzed for GBO-3 include:

  • The dieback of large areas of the Amazon forest,.

The Outlook argues, however, that such outcomes are avoidable if effective and coordinated action is taken to reduce the multiple pressures being imposed on biodiversity.

The document notes that the linked challenges of biodiversity loss and climate change must be addressed by policymakers with equal priority and in close co-ordination, if the most severe impacts of each are to be avoided. Conserving biodiversity and the ecosystems it underpins can help to store more carbon, reducing further build-up of greenhouse gases; and people will be better able to adapt to unavoidable climate change if ecosystems are made more resilient with the easing of other pressures.

The Outlook outlines a possible new strategy for reducing biodiversity loss which includes addressing the underlying causes or indirect drivers of biodiversity loss, such as patterns of consumption, the impacts of increased trade and demographic change. Ending harmful subsidies would also be an important step.  On p75 it has this to say about consumption: “Alleviating pressure from land use changes in the tropics is essential, if the negative impacts of loss of terrestrial biodiversity and associated ecosystem services are to be minimized. This involves a combination of measures, including an increase in productivityfrom existing crop and pasture lands, reducing post-harvest losses, sustainable forest management and moderating excessive and wasteful meat consumption.”

GBO-3 concludes that we can no longer see the continued loss of biodiversity as an issue separate from the core concerns of society. Realizing objectives such as tackling poverty and improving the health, wealth and security of present and future generations will be greatly strengthened if we finally give biodiversity the priority it deserves.  It says that for a fraction of the money summoned up instantly by the world’s governments in 2008-9 to avoid economic meltdown, we can avoid a much more serious and fundamental breakdown in the Earth’s life support systems.

1. Global Biodiversity Outlook 3 published

 

The Convention on Global Biodiversity has published its third and extremly depressing assessment – Global Biodiversity Outlook 3 – of the current state of biodiversity.

 

It finds that the target agreed by the world’s Governments in 2002, “to achieve by 2010 a significant reduction of the current rate of biodiversity loss at the global, regional and national level as a contribution to poverty alleviation and to the benefit of all life on Earth”, has not been met.

 

The Outlook warns that natural systems that support economies, lives and livelihoods across the planet are at risk of rapid degradation and collapse, unless there is swift, radical and creative action to conserve and sustainably use the variety of life on Earth.  It says that we may be at risk of reaching ‘tipping points’ after which  ecosystems shift to alternative, less productive states from which it may be difficult or impossible to recover.

 

Potential tipping points analyzed for GBO-3 include:

  • The dieback of large areas of the Amazon forest,.

 

The Outlook argues, however, that such outcomes are avoidable if effective and coordinated action is taken to reduce the multiple pressures being imposed on biodiversity.

 

The document notes that the linked challenges of biodiversity loss and climate change must be addressed by policymakers with equal priority and in close co-ordination, if the most severe impacts of each are to be avoided. Conserving biodiversity and the ecosystems it underpins can help to store more carbon, reducing further build-up of greenhouse gases; and people will be better able to adapt to unavoidable climate change if ecosystems are made more resilient with the easing of other pressures.

 

The Outlook outlines a possible new strategy for reducing biodiversity loss which includes addressing the underlying causes or indirect drivers of biodiversity loss, such as patterns of consumption, the impacts of increased trade and demographic change. Ending harmful subsidies would also be an important step.  On p75 it has this to say about consumption: “Alleviating pressure from land use changes in the tropics is essential, if the negative impacts of loss of terrestrial biodiversity and associated ecosystem services are to be minimized. This involves a combination of measures, including an increase in productivityfrom existing crop and pasture lands, reducing post-harvest losses, sustainable forest management and moderating excessive and wasteful meat consumption.”

 

GBO-3 concludes that we can no longer see the continued loss of biodiversity as an issue separate from the core concerns of society. Realizing objectives such as tackling poverty and improving the health, wealth and security of present and future generations will be greatly strengthened if we finally give biodiversity the priority it deserves.  It says that for a fraction of the money summoned up instantly by the world’s governments in 2008-9 to avoid economic meltdown, we can avoid a much more serious and fundamental breakdown in the Earth’s life support systems.

GBO-3 sets out a number of elements that could be considered in a future strategy to reduce biodiversity loss. The elements include:

  • Continued and intensified direct intervention to reduce loss of biodiversity, for example through expanding and strengthening protected areas, and programmes targeted at vulnerable species and habitats
  •    Continued and intensified measures to reduce the direct pressures on biodiversity, such as preventing nutrient pollution, cutting off the pathways for introduction alien invasive species, and introducing more sustainable practices in fisheries, forestry and agriculture
  • Much greater efficiency in the use of land, energy, fresh water and materials to meet growing demand from a rising and more prosperous population.
  • Use of market incentives, and avoidance of perverse subsidies, to minimize unsustainable resource use and wasteful consumption.
  • Strategic planning to reconcile development with the conservation of biodiversity and the maintenance of the multiple services provided by the ecosystems it underpins.
  • Restoration of ecosystems to safeguard essential services to human societies, while recognizing that protecting existing ecosystems is generally much more cost-effective than allowing them to degrade in the first place
  • Ensuring that the benefits arising from use of and access to genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge, for example through the development of drugs and cosmetics, are equitably shared with the countries and cultures from which they are obtained.
  • Communication, education and awareness-raising to ensure that as far as possible, everyone understands the value of biodiversity and what steps they can take to protect it, including through changes in personal consumption and behavior.
Thursday
Feb112010

Project Noah - biodiversity

This beta-project popped up yesterday from twitterland, which shows, to me, the value of thousands of semi-random small mutations in the information we receive.

Noah = networked organisms and habitats, and is an interesting example of the potential when digital and paper-based science get mixed up in the test tube.

The opportunity of using apps to make it easier, more enjoyable and faster and find out and communicate the wildlife on the patch under our feet is one to watch.

Click through to find out more http://www.networkedorganisms.com/