China Daily Global Weekly

US prodded on failings in biodiversi­ty

Biden urged to overcome resistance to global pact in Senate

- By LIU YINMENG in Los Angeles teresaliu@chinadaily­usa.com

Environmen­tal experts are urging those US politician­s opposed to a key internatio­nal agreement to set aside commercial interests in order for the country to join the pact aimed at preserving biodiversi­ty.

William Snape is among those calling for action in the United States.

“It’s hard for me even to admit, because I do love my country, but the opposition to the Convention on Biological Diversity doesn’t have much rationalit­y to it,” Snape, a senior counsel at the Center for Biological Diversity, told China Daily.

The United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity calls for the conservati­on of biological diversity, the sustainabl­e use of its components, and the fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from the use of genetic resources. It entered into force in 1993. More than 190 countries and the European Union have joined the agreement.

The US is the only UN member country that is not a party to the treaty, and Snape points to resistance in the Senate, which refuses to ratify the treaty.

“The holdup, the problem with the US not joining, is the US Senate,” he said. “The US Senate is still largely controlled by fossil fuel interests, and by other corporate interests, and the US Senate has shown no interest in ratifying the Convention on Biological Diversity, and frankly, a lot of other treaties.”

Snape, who is the assistant dean of adjunct faculty affairs at American University Washington College of Law, has written extensivel­y over the years on the subject. In an article in 2012 for China Dialogue, an independen­t organizati­on, he drew attention to the “corporate oligarchy” that stands in the way.

“How this has come to be is a modern lesson in the power of oligarchic­al segments to take over political parties. In other words, old guard corporate users of the Earth’s biological resources will not succumb lightly to new economic-ecologic paradigms that weaken their power,” he wrote in the article titled “Why everyone loses from US boycott of the UN Biodiversi­ty Agreement”.

Many US biotechnol­ogy companies expressed concern about sharing their intellectu­al property related to genetic research with other nations. They also want to maintain control over natural resources from developing countries, experts say. Under the treaty, biotechnol­ogy companies would have to compensate developing nations for using their genetic material to create treatment.

With these concerns, the US, under president George H.W. Bush, did not sign the agreement when the Biodiversi­ty Convention opened for signatures at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992.

After Bill Clinton became president in 1993, he signed the treaty and sent it to the Senate for ratificati­on. However, the ratificati­on was blocked by many Republican senators from coming to a vote. They were worried that the convention would undermine the nation’s commercial interests.

Snape said concerns about intellectu­al property were addressed in the so-called Seven Understand­ings, which was drafted by the Clinton administra­tion when it sent the treaty to the Senate for ratificati­on. The Seven Understand­ings reinforced US priorities, such as retaining sovereignt­y over the country’s natural resources.

“I think those problems have largely been solved, I don’t think that’s the real reason, I think it’s a much deeper political resistance by some in the US to participat­e with the rest of the world,” he said.

Since Clinton, no president has brought the treaty to the Senate floor for considerat­ion, Snape said.

“We know there’s not enough votes, we know that it’s going to take 67 votes out of 100 to ratify and we know that every single Republican will vote against it,” he said. “We only have 50 Democrats. We would need 17 Republican senators to join, and I just don’t see that happening.”

However, the Biden administra­tion has some flexibilit­y on the issue and should participat­e in the internatio­nal dialogue to prevent biodiversi­ty loss, within the bounds of the US laws, he said.

“I think Joe Biden could administra­tively send high-level delegation­s to the Convention on Biodiversi­ty meetings, order his agencies to participat­e as volunteers, when they are able, and when it’s allowed,” Snape said. “I think the US could still be a very constructi­ve internatio­nal partner.”

The 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity took place virtually in Kunming, China, during Oct 11-15. Its second portion is scheduled in the first half of next year, also in Kunming.

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