Jamaica Gleaner

A more integrated approach to the environmen­t required

- David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council. david.jessop@ caribbean-council.org

David Jessop

AFEW days ago, the United Nations published a document which indicated that historical­ly unpreceden­ted levels of human activity were causing dramatic changes to the variety of plant and animal life in the world.

The report said that many species had become extinct over the past 50 years, and that up to one million of the remaining eight million varieties of life that account for biodiversi­ty globally may disappear within decades.

The hard-hitting 1,500-page report, the 2019 Global Assessment

Study, was compiled by hundreds of internatio­nal experts. Based on thousands of scientific studies, it identified multiple human factors at work, including the overexploi­tation of resources on land and in the sea, climate change, pollution, and changes in land use.

It indicated, for example, that globally, 25 per cent of plant and animal species are vulnerable to extinction and that a reduction in the diversity of cultivated crops and domesticat­ed breeds of animals meant that farming will in the future be less resilient to climate change as well as to pests and pathogens.

The report detailed how plastic pollution has increased tenfold since 1980, affecting sea life, and set out how increasing­ly, the demand for food, energy, and materials is at the expense of nature’s ability to continue to provide.

Introducin­g the study, which is intended to provide a scientific basis for policymaki­ng, Unesco’s Director General, Audrey Azoulay, said that it put the world on notice that protecting biodiversi­ty had become as vital a fight as that to address climate change. It was, she said, “our responsibi­lity towards future generation­s”, adding that the report meant that “no one will be able to claim that they did not know”.

Such knowledge is, of course, important, but there remains a huge gap between awareness and the implementa­tion of policies and remedial measures in biodiversi­ty-rich regions such as the Caribbean. This is because developing nations often reach less-than-satisfacto­ry compromise­s between the need for investor-led developmen­t, economic growth, and local concerns about protecting what makes a country or region environmen­tally special.

CARIBBEAN BIODIVERSI­TY STUDY

Last November, the Caribbean published its own biodiversi­ty study. Although scarcely noticed, it assessed the progress and difficulti­es the region is experienci­ng in trying to move towards achieving each of the 20 global biodiversi­ty targets agreed in 2010 in Aichi in Japan.

As The State of Biodiversi­ty in the Caribbean Community explains, the main threats facing the nations of CARICOM are the destructio­n and fragmentat­ion of plant and animal life due to increasing urbanisati­on, the conversion of lands for tourism and commercial developmen­t, and the expansion of agricultur­e.

Such challenges, it notes, have been exacerbate­d by the rapid growth of population­s and increased economic activity as well as by climate change in the form of ocean warming, more intense hurricanes, and severe drought.

In an indication of how difficult to resolve the biodiversi­ty challenges set by the UN will be, the Caribbean’s report notes that conservati­on and sustainabl­e management of biodiversi­ty in the region is often hampered by the competing goals of economic growth and national developmen­t.

What the CARICOM review suggests is that while the Caribbean is of global significan­ce when it comes to biodiversi­ty, there is an unresolved tension between what is desirable ecological­ly and the need for developmen­t.

That is to say, the region has yet to fully address the necessary tradeoffs between the environmen­t, the requiremen­t of government­s for revenue, the private sector and internatio­nal investors for profit, and pressure from growing population­s for economic and social developmen­t, all of which is to say nothing about the impact of avarice.

Greed apart, the characteri­stics of this far-from-easy-to-resolve conundrum can be seen in the detail of the Caribbean’s review document and its recommenda­tions, for example, in relation to land-clearance subsidies for agricultur­e and the role of the private sector and tourism.

On subsidies for land clearance, it notes that reduced land taxes for productive agricultur­al lands and subsidised fuel and pesticides are leading to increased forest clearances and degraded soils.

INCENTIVE AND SUBSIDY MECHANISMS

Such efforts to stimulate sectoral growth and productivi­ty, the report observes, are creating unfavourab­le conditions for Caribbean biodiversi­ty. It attributes the problem to the fact that most incentive and subsidy mechanisms do not fall under the direct control of ministries responsibl­e for biodiversi­ty management and that progress on biodiversi­ty targets are “limited by the constraine­d fiscal conditions prevalent in the region”.

The CARICOM review also observes that although tourism is the leading contributo­r to GDP in many CARICOM countries, inadequate­ly regulated and managed, it can cause major pressures on and damage to ecosystems and the ability of the sector to provide services, including those necessary to attract tourists and tourism investment.

The review makes several recommenda­tions, including the need for stronger regulatory and institutio­nal frameworks for the environmen­t; mechanisms to ensure compliance; greater availabili­ty of resources; improved coordinati­on between government agencies and with the private sector; and the need to mainstream biodiversi­ty awareness across economic sectors and business.

Despite the importance of addressing such issues in the Caribbean and globally, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that achieving full implementa­tion of what was agreed in Aichi nearly a decade ago will be very difficult.

Not only do vested commercial interests stand in the way in the region and elsewhere, but the pressure they are able to exert can be hard for politician­s to resist in financiall­y under-resourced nations that continue to need investment and sustainabl­e employment.

As with climate change, satisfacto­rily addressing biodiversi­ty requires more than talk, consensus, and the adoption of reports, especially when there are states that reject interdepen­dence and pay as little attention to the environmen­t and the impact of climate change as they do to inequity and social justice.

Thankfully, however, much of the Caribbean thinks differentl­y about both the environmen­t and its social commitment and is still one of the world’s greatest centres of biodiversi­ty.

And that is why the region ought to be emphasisin­g action, and how, with support, it intends to deliver an integrated response to the now well-documented biodiversi­ty and other environmen­tal challenges it faces.

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