The Guardian Australia

Campaign launched to protect 80% of Amazon at key environmen­t summit

- Phoebe Weston

Indigenous voices on the environmen­t are finally being heard as Marseille hosts a global biodiversi­ty summit, with a call to protect 80% of the Amazon, as well as a “counter conference” highlighti­ng the conservati­on movement’s historic violation of people’s rights.

For the first time in its sevendecad­e history, the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) is including indigenous peoples as full voting members in their own right, rather than under the NGO category. Dozens of indigenous meetings are happening at the summit – which occurs every four years – with representa­tives from 23 organisati­ons.

Greater inclusion of indigenous representa­tives comes as the European “fortress conservati­on” model, which resulted in vast human rights abuses and an estimated 20 million people displaced from their homelands worldwide since the 19th century, is increasing­ly being challenged.

Historical­ly, the global conservati­on movement was based on the idea that protected areas flourish free from human disturbanc­e, but a growing body of evidence shows that indigenous communitie­s are the best at looking after wildlife, and that as much as 80% of the world’s remaining forest biodiversi­ty lies within indigenous peoples’ territorie­s.

José Gregorio Díaz Mirabal, a member of Venezuela’s Wakuenai Kurripaco people and coordinato­r of the Congress of Indigenous Organisati­ons of the Amazon River Basin (Coica), which represents more than 2 million indigenous people, said they had been fighting for decades to be heard.

“We come to the IUCN with our voice and voting rights. We seek to build a new alliance with equal rights on equal terms, but we see that there is still much to do, so much to recognise,” he said.

“Less than 1% of all the funding that is invested in protecting intact biodiversi­ty and mitigating climate change in our territorie­s reaches our communitie­s, and that has to change. It’s absurd that so much of the funding goes to consultant­s who are sent to tell us what we already know about how to conserve what we are already conserving.”

Representa­tives from countries across the world will vote on motions this week that will shape future global conservati­on policy and the allocation of finance. Coica’s Amazonia por la vida (Amazonia for Life) campaign motion is demanding protection of 80% of the Amazon basin by 2025 (protected areas and indigenous territorie­s make up about 45% currently) with the emphasis on indigenous peoples managing those protected areas. They are asking government­s to recognise 100% of indigenous land in the Amazon and ban all forms of extractive industries in those areas.

A record number of environmen­tal defenders were killed in 2019 for protecting their land, 40% of whom were from indigenous communitie­s. “Science is saying the best-conserved areas are indigenous territorie­s … yet we have the highest level of murder,” Díaz Mirabal said.

“National parks receive funding and support from government­s but when it comes to our indigenous territorie­s we’re left to spill our own blood to defend it. Now it is time for our indigenous territorie­s to be protected with the same level of support and legislatio­n,” he said.

As well as showcasing a range of ideas from campaigner­s, scientists and conservati­onists, the summit provides policymake­rs with a chance to discuss issues in the run-up to the Cop15 “Paris agreement for nature”, due to be negotiated in Kunming next year. The headline target is likely to be protecting 30% of the planet for nature by the end of the decade (the “30x30” target).

The draft Cop15 agreement includes a clause that traditiona­l knowledge of indigenous peoples and local communitie­s should guide decision-making “with their free, prior, and informed consent”. But indigenous groups, academics and campaigner­s from 18 countries gathered in Marseille at the “Our Land, Our Nature” congress, a “counter-summit” on the eve of the IUCN meeting, called for land rights to be at the heart of conservati­on, not protected areas. More than 3,000 people attended the event, either in person or online, which included a protest march through the French city.

“The 30x30 target is a structural problem,” said Mordecai Ogada, director of Conservati­on Solutions Afrika. “We need to rethink the definition of protected areas, those that exist, and we need to look for a more sophistica­ted model of biodiversi­ty and conservati­on. That’s where the big organisati­ons have such a challenge, because they find it very difficult to change their own structures.”

The alternativ­e summit included representa­tives from Survival Internatio­nal, Rainforest Foundation UK and the Minority Rights Group, as well as a number of indigenous people with different perspectiv­es on the usefulness of protected areas.

Juan Pablo Gutiérrez, a representa­tive of the Yukpa people in Colombia but living in exile in France, said areas that government­s were designatin­g as “protected” had been safeguarde­d for years by indigenous people.

“What’s happening with 30x30 is that government­s want to distract global opinion by proposing solutions that don’t relate to the real problem at all. If you want to attack climate change, you need to attack the causes that are leading to it,” he said, citing western consumptio­n and overexploi­tation of resources as the key drivers of ecological destructio­n.

A UN report published earlier this year found indigenous people in South America were the best at looking after forests, with deforestat­ion 50% lower than elsewhere, according to a review of more than 300 studies. Representa­tives at the Our Land, Our Nature gathering argued that there was little scientific evidence that protecting 30% of the planet would stem biodiversi­ty loss. The previous 10-year UN target agreed in 2010 in Aichi, Japan, set goals that by 2020, 17% of terrestria­l areas and 10% of coastal and marine areas would be conserved.

Lara Dominguez, a lawyer with the Minority Rights Group, said: “Despite being very close to achieving the 17% target in many states, biodiversi­ty loss has reached unpreceden­ted levels. Even though we have more protected areas, it hasn’t actually impacted biodiversi­ty in a positive way.”

Dominguez believes these policies are driven more by politics than science and argues that a rights-based approach to conservati­on would be far more effective.

Francisco Ramiro Batzín Chojoj, legal representa­tive of the Guatemalab­ased indigenous organisati­on Sotz’il, said it was important that indigenous people had a seat at the table and that working towards the 30x30 target was “fundamenta­l”.

“We are calling for indigenous people to be respected in all these initiative­s because it’s essential they are involved.”

Stewart Maginnis, global director of the IUCN’s nature-based solutions group, said: “The 30x30 can and must work to support indigenous peoples by strengthen­ing their custodians­hip, voice and rights.

“Protection for nature conservati­on need not and should not exclude people,” he said. “Many of the world’s protected and conserved areas are managed in a way where people and communitie­s live and work within their boundaries.”

A UN policy brief on human rights and the environmen­t, released last month, emphasised the need for a dramatic departure from “conservati­on as usual”. Neville Ash, director of the UN Environmen­t Programme conservati­on monitoring centre, said indigenous people and communitie­s who governed large areas of land were often not recognised for their extensive contributi­ons to nature conservati­on. “This needs to change,” he said.

“The draft framework is explicit on the importance of employing rightsbase­d approaches for its implementa­tion, and government­s and other actors will need to learn from mistakes of the past and be held accountabl­e for delivering on these future commitment­s in line with human rights obligation­s.”

Find more age of extinction coverage here, and follow biodiversi­ty reporters Phoebe Weston and Patrick Greenfield on Twitter for all the latest news and features

 ?? Photograph: Noé Gabriel ?? Taneyulime Pilisi, a Kalin’a woman from French Guiana, speaks at an Our Land Our Nature counter-summit march in Marseille.
Photograph: Noé Gabriel Taneyulime Pilisi, a Kalin’a woman from French Guiana, speaks at an Our Land Our Nature counter-summit march in Marseille.
 ?? Photograph: Arnold Jerocki/Getty ?? ‘We seek to build a new alliance with equal rights on equal terms,’ José Gregorio Díaz Mirabal told the IUCN congress in Marseille.
Photograph: Arnold Jerocki/Getty ‘We seek to build a new alliance with equal rights on equal terms,’ José Gregorio Díaz Mirabal told the IUCN congress in Marseille.

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