The Commercial Appeal

New report guides the value of nature

-

BERLIN – Countries have approved the first comprehens­ive guidelines for judging the value of nature following four years of intense debate, officials said Monday.

The report was endorsed by 139 countries – including the U.S., Russia, China, France, the United Kingdom and Germany – that are members of the United Nations-backed Intergover­nmental Science-policy Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services.

IPBES’ authors hope the guide they’ve drawn up with the help of experts from a wide range of discipline­s will make it easier for government­s to consider more than just the economic benefits of a project when deciding whether and how to go ahead with it.

That includes figuring out how local communitie­s will gain or lose from a project such as a hydroelect­ric dam – a situation that has regularly led to friction among businesses, citizens and authoritie­s in the past.

Rather than prescribe a set way for government­s to estimate these noneconomi­c benefits, the report provides them with tools for working through the often complex assessment process, said its co-author Patricia Balvanera of the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

“We provide a roadmap to decisionma­kers

for how to deal with this very complex situation they face every single day,” she said.

Fellow author Unai Pascual of the Basque Center for Climate Change in Bilbao, Spain, said the report’s approval represents a “milestone” for the way government­s view nature, by challengin­g some of the underlying assumption­s that have contribute­d to environmen­tal destructio­n.

The report was drafted with the help of dozens of experts from both social and natural sciences in an attempt to bridge the often considerab­le difference­s between discipline­s and find a common approach they could all support, he said.

“We don’t know what will come next,” said Pascual, but he suggested that the guidelines are likely to be reflected in the negotiatio­ns at December’s U.N. conference on biodiversi­ty in Montreal.

Representa­tives of Indigenous groups welcomed the new guidelines and an IPBES report published last week that highlighte­d the need for sustainabl­e use of nature.

“There is a growing body of evidence showing that when the rights of Indigenous peoples are guaranteed, we outperform all other forest managers in reducing deforestat­ion and preventing wildfires,” said José Gregório Díaz Mirabal of COICA, a coordinati­ng body for the indigenous organizati­ons of the countries of the Amazon Basin.

“If the goal is to succeed in saving the Amazon, any plan must be carried out in collaborat­ion with Indigenous peoples,” he said.

The new release of guidelines follows a separate IPBES report released Friday detailing that overexploi­tation, climate change, pollution and deforestat­ion are pushing 1 million species towards extinction.

Associated Press climate and environmen­tal coverage receives support from several private foundation­s. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content.

 ?? FERNANDO LLANO/AP ?? Boca reservoir in Santiago, Mexico, which supplies water to the northern city of Monterrey, is almost dry as the northern part of Mexico is affected by an intense drought.
FERNANDO LLANO/AP Boca reservoir in Santiago, Mexico, which supplies water to the northern city of Monterrey, is almost dry as the northern part of Mexico is affected by an intense drought.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States