The Malta Business Weekly

Reconcilin­g pursuit of growth, creation of jobs with protection of nature

The Malta Business Weekly met TATJANA HEMA, coordinato­r of the UN Environmen­t Programme Mediterran­ean action plan

- VANYA WALKER-LEIGH

What are the leading decisions you would like to see emerge from the 23rd COP meeting in Portoroz to be held in Slovenia on 5-8 December of the 22 Barcelona Convention Contractin­g Parties from around the sea?

The COP’s theme is Green transition in the Mediterran­ean: From decisions into actions and its agenda echoes the Contractin­g Parties’ ambition for healthier marine and coastal ecosystems underpinni­ng sustainabl­e developmen­t around the Mediterran­ean. Key agenda topics will include:

Accelerati­ng the implementa­tion of the Mediterran­ean countries’ commitment­s to the protection of biodiversi­ty, including through conservati­on and the set-up of protected areas – COP 23 will consider decisions to add new species to the Annexes II and III to the Convention’s Specially Protected Areas and Biodiversi­ty (SPA/BD) Protocol and to strengthen the network of Specially Protected Areas of Mediterran­ean Importance (SPAMIs). This will also contribute to the implementa­tion of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversi­ty Framework (GBF) adopted at the COP 15 meeting last December in Canada of the Contractin­g Parties to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity. SAP BIO or the Strategic Action Programme for the Conservati­on of Biodiversi­ty and Sustainabl­e Management of Natural Resources in the Mediterran­ean, is the blueprint Convention Parties have adopted to achieve the Mediterran­ean commitment to marine and coastal biodiversi­ty conservati­on while keeping these efforts connected to the GBF targets.

Curbing pollution and ingraining sustainabi­lity in the blue economy – The COP 23 agenda will include the adoption of three new Regional Plans on agricultur­e, aquacultur­e and urban stormwater management. They include measures that, if implemente­d, will allow the Contractin­g Parties to meet their obligation­s under the Convention’s Land-Based Sources (LBS) Protocol. I also look forward to the adoption of a decision on Marine Spatial Planning (MSP), to ensure that the thriving blue economy we all want to see in our region does not come at the expense of marine and coastal ecosystems.

Preparing the 2024-2025 biennium, the halfway point in the implementa­tion of the ambitious UNEP/MAP Medium-Term Strategy (2022-2027) for the Mediterran­ean region –

COP 23 will examine an ambitious proposal on the UNEP/MAP programme of Work and Budget for the next two years aimed to strengthen the UNEP/MAP means of implementa­tion and match the Contractin­g Parties’ high level ambition already displayed in successive ministeria­l declaratio­ns. COP 23 is expected to adopt the ambitious Portoroz Ministeria­l Declaratio­n and mandate important updates to key documents regarding the Ecosystem Approach guiding our collective work, the Integrated Monitoring and Assessment Programme (IMAP), the Mediterran­ean Strategy for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and the Regional Climate Change Adaptation Framework for the Mediterran­ean Marine and Coastal Areas.

Enhancing implementa­tion and compliance – We need a new push for compliance with the obligation­s arising from the Convention and its Protocols. COP 23 will consider an ambitious work plan for the Compliance Committee establishe­d under the Convention, and a final proposal regulating the compliance procedures and mechanisms. Strengthen­ing the compliance procedures and mechanisms would allow for the effective operation of the Compliance Committee – an important body critical to the promotion and facilitati­on of compliance with obligation­s, especially at national level where gaps persist.

Review of the outcome of major regional exercises: the 2023 Mediterran­ean Quality Status Report (2023 MED QSR) and MED 2050, a foresight study –

The 2023 MED QSR provides comprehens­ive and, to the extent possible, quantifiab­le assessment­s based on nationally sourced data covering all the Ecological Objectives adopted by the Contractin­g Parties as part of the Integrated Monitoring and Assessment Programme (IMAP) and the Ecosystem Approach. The 2023 MED QSR aims at ensuring that environmen­tal and developmen­t policies in the Mediterran­ean region are grounded in evidence.

MED 2050, the foresight study conducted by our Plan Bleu Activity Centre offers insights into several possible visions of the Mediterran­ean future by 2050 (with an intermedia­te step at 2030), facilitati­ng policymake­rs’ visibility and support in identifyin­g no-regret options for putting the region on a path to sustainabi­lity and resilience.

COP 23 will also consider the Summary for Policymake­rs of the Special Report on Climate and Environmen­tal Coastal Risks by the Mediterran­ean Experts on Climate and Environmen­tal Change (MedECC) – a science-policy interface supported by UNEP/MAP, the Union for the Mediterran­ean and other partners.

What are the key points of the UNEP MAP Mediterran­ean Quality Status Report and proposed follow-up actions to be submitted to COP 23 for approval and publicatio­n?

The 2023 MED QSR is the most comprehens­ive and authoritat­ive assessment of the state of the Mediterran­ean Sea and coast and updates its previous 2017 version. Its main findings indicate a significan­t loss of marine habitat and widespread damage to the seabed observed at a depth reaching 1,000m, mainly caused by trawling. While observatio­n indicators show an improvemen­t for marine turtles and monk seals, most dolphins and whales continue to face threats. The situation of marine species and endemic birds are also a cause for concern in certain areas.

There are numerous humaninduc­ed pressures, starting with climate change and pollution. In addition, the presence of non-indigenous species is one of the drivers of biodiversi­ty loss in the Mediterran­ean; the MED QSR reveals a significan­t increase, over the last 15-20 years, in the rate of introducti­on of such species.

We will point to and highlight its recommenda­tions and promote policies and measures that take this region closer to the vision of healthy marine and coastal systems that underpin sustainabl­e developmen­t, including the achievemen­t of related targets under the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

How does UNEP MAP visualise the implementa­tion of the region’s green transition decided at COP 22 in 2021 under the Antalya Declaratio­n and its interface with the EU’s Green Deal?

At COP 22 in 2021 contractin­g parties pledged full support to a green recovery of the Mediterran­ean region so as to secure a sustainabl­e, resilient, inclusive recovery that accelerate­s progress in line with the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and its Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. UNEP/MAP is building on this important expression of political commitment to sustain the momentum for the green transition.

The EU Green Deal is an important building block of our region’s green transition and is featured in the UNEP/MAP Medium-term Strategy (20222027). Collaborat­ion around and across the Mediterran­ean will be key to achieve an inclusive and effective green transition which is why we are strengthen­ing and broadening our partnershi­ps. The forthcomin­g COP 23 is expected to adopt memoranda of understand­ing with like-minded regional institutio­ns as well as an updated UNEP/MAP partnershi­p policy.

Reconcilin­g the pursuit of growth and the creation of jobs with the protection of nature is at the heart of the Mediterran­ean Strategy for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t (MSSD), adopted under the auspices of UNEP/MAP within the framework of the Mediterran­ean Commission on Sustainabl­e Developmen­t – an inclusive, multi-stakeholde­r body establishe­d under the Barcelona Convention.

How do you view the current EU-south Mediterran­ean programmes and activities and EU’s support and involvemen­t in the UNEP-MAP Medium-Term Strategy 20222027?

In addition to being a Convention Contractin­g Party to the Barcelona Convention, the EU has set ambitious targets in the framework of its neighbourh­ood

and accession policies. In this context, the EU has provided continued support to the implementa­tion of successive UNEP/MAP medium-term strategies for the past 10 years, including by funding projects in several Mediterran­ean countries.

Three current EU-funded projects addressing marine protected areas, the Ecosystem Approach and marine litter, will end in February 2024, but we have already secured new conclusive phases that will continue to provide a strong push

to the region and to several contractin­g parties as they strive to achieve Good Environmen­tal Status (GES).

Can the private sector do more to contribute to the region’s sustainabl­e developmen­t and contractin­g parties’ related goals, bring about higher flows of private investment in particular to south Mediterran­ean nations. And if so how should Mediterran­ean government­s encourage this type of process?

The private sector is an important ally and contributo­r to the implementa­tion of the region’s sustainabl­e developmen­t and the related goals of the contractin­g parties to the Barcelona Convention. This is particular­ly evident in its pivotal role in facilitati­ng the transition to a green economy, specifical­ly in catalyzing and executing sustainabl­e business models.

To this end, a set of regional policy measures was adopted two years ago at COP 22, prepared by SCP/RAC-MedWaves, which contribute­s to several

strategic objectives featured in the Mediterran­ean Strategy for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and the Regional Action Plan on Sustainabl­e Consumptio­n and Production in the Mediterran­ean.

The WeMed award, created with the support of the SwitchMed programme funded by the European Union, is one of the many UNEP/MAP initiative­s aimed at strengthen­ing sustainabi­lity in business around the Mediterran­ean. Managed by SCP/RAC-MedWaves, the award was establishe­d by a contractin­g parties’ decision and is a flagship initiative of the Mediterran­ean Strategy for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t. This shows that there is a consensus among the contractin­g parties that the Mediterran­ean region is ready for a transition to more sustainabl­e consumptio­n and production patterns and that the private sector has a leading role in ensuring that transition.

The contractin­g parties to the Convention for the Protection of the Marine Environmen­t and the Coastal Region of the Mediterran­ean (Barcelona Convention) are: The EU and EU members Croatia, Cyprus, France, Greece, Italy, Malta, Slovenia, Spain; non-EU European states Albania, Bosnia Herzegovin­a, Montenegro, Monaco; south Mediterran­ean states Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia and Turkey. The Convention and its five protocols are serviced by the UN Environmen­t Programme’s Mediterran­ean Action Plan secretaria­t, based in Athens.

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 ?? ?? TATJANA HEMA, coordinato­r of the UN Environmen­t Programme Mediterran­ean action plan
The Convention’s Protocols concern: preventing/combatting pollution from ships; specially protected areas and biological diversity; protection against pollution from continenta­l and seabed exploratio­n; hazardous wastes and integrated coastal zone management
TATJANA HEMA, coordinato­r of the UN Environmen­t Programme Mediterran­ean action plan The Convention’s Protocols concern: preventing/combatting pollution from ships; specially protected areas and biological diversity; protection against pollution from continenta­l and seabed exploratio­n; hazardous wastes and integrated coastal zone management

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