Our life insurance, our natural capital: an EU biodiversity strategy to 2020 Claudia Olazábal Deputy Head of Unit Biodiversity Unit DG Environment European Commission Greens/EFA Conference- Seeds for a sustainable future
Feb 06, 2016
Our life insurance, our natural capital:
an EU biodiversity strategy to 2020
Claudia OlazábalDeputy Head of Unit
Biodiversity UnitDG Environment
European Commission
Greens/EFA Conference- Seeds for a sustainable future
Decline in species and habitats degradation have led to an significant decline in the genetic diversity of life on Earth.
Since beginning of agriculture, the world’s farmers have developed roughly 10 000 plant species for use in food and fodder production.
Today, only 150 crops feed most of the world’s population Only 12 crops provide 80 % of dietary energy from plants, with rice,
wheat, maize and potato providing 60 % About 3/4 of the genetic diversity found in agricultural crops have been
lost over the past century in China: local rice varieties being cultivated has declined from 46,000
in the 1950s to slightly more than 1,000 in 2006 General homogenization of landscapes and agricultural varieties make
rural populations vulnerable to future changes, if genetic traits kept over thousands of years are allowed to disappear.
THE PROBLEM
Significant progress on ex situ conservation of crops - the collection of seeds from different genetic varieties for cataloguing and storage for possible future use
There are some 1 750 individual gene banks worldwide
For some 200 to 300 crops, over 70% of genetic diversity is already conserved in gene banks
THE PROBLEM
Among the most ambitious programmes: Millennium Seed Bank Partnership, which now includes nearly 2 billion seeds from 30,000 wild plant species, mainly from drylands;
Svalbard Global Seed Vault, in Norway, close to the Arctic Circle, to provide the ultimate safety net against accidental loss of agricultural diversity in traditional gene banks. The vault has capacity to conserve 4.5 million crop seed samples
EXAMPLES OF EX-SITU CONSERVATION
Figure 1. Geographic
distribution of gene
banks with holdings of
>10 000 accessions in
national and regional
gene banks (blue);
CGIAR centre gene banks
(beige); Svalbard Global
Seed Vault (green)
However, in addition to ex-situ conservation, major efforts are still needed to conserve genetic diversity on farms (for adaptation to climate change and other challenges)
The FAO recognises the leading role played by plant and animal breeders in conservation and sustainable use of genetic resources
THE PROBLEM
Environmental
Political
Economic
RATIONALE FOR ACTION
EU MANDATE
March 2010 European Spring Council endorsed:
A 2050 VISIONEuropean Union biodiversity and the ecosystem services it provides – its natural capital – are protected, valued and appropriately restored for biodiversity’s intrinsic value and for their essential contribution to human wellbeing and economic prosperity, and so that catastrophic changes caused by the loss of biodiversity are avoided.
A 2020 HEADLINE TARGET
Halt the loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services in the EU and restore them insofar as feasible, and step up the EU's contribution to averting global biodiversity loss
GLOBAL MANDATE
CBD COP 10 (Nagoya, October 2010):
Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020 - 2050 vision - 2020 mission: Take effective and urgent action to
halt the loss of biodiversity…
- 20 “Aichi Targets”
Strategy for Resource Mobilisation- Finance target(s) expected to be adopted at
COP-11 in Delhi, 2012
Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit-Sharing (ABS)
20 AICHI TARGETS
AICHI TARGETS
Target 13: By 2020, the genetic diversity of cultivated plants and farmed and domesticated animals and of wild relatives, including other socio-economically as well as culturally valuable species, is maintained, and strategies have been developed and implemented for minimizing genetic erosion and safeguarding their genetic diversity
STRUCTURE OF THE STRATEGY
2050 Vision
2020 headline targetHalt biodiversity loss – restore ecosystem services – global contribution
Enhance implementation
of nature legislation
Restore ecosystems est. Green
Infrastructure
Sustainable Agriculture
&Forestry
Sustainable Fisheries
Combat Alien Invasive
Species
Contribute to averting global
biodiversity loss
ANNEX OF ACTIONS
6 Targets:
By 2020, maximise areas under agriculture across grasslands, arable land and permanent crops that are covered by biodiversity-related measures under the CAP so as to ensure the conservation of biodiversity and to bring about a measurable improvement(*) in the conservation status of species and habitats that depend on or are affected by agriculture and in the provision of ecosystem services as compared to the EU2010 Baseline, thus contributing to enhance sustainable management.
(*) Improvement is to be measured against the quantified enhancement targets for the conservation status of species and habitats of EU interest in Target 1 and the restoration of degraded ecosystems under target 2.
3A. Sustainable Agriculture
Actions:
Action 10: Conserve Europe’s agricultural genetic diversity
The Commission and Member States will encourage the uptake of agri environmental measures to support genetic diversity in agriculture and explore the scope for developing a strategy for the conservation of genetic diversity
3A. Sustainable Agriculture
Revision of the EU Regime for seed marketing- led by DG SANCO
Community Programmes for the Conservation of genetic resources in agriculture – led by DG AGRICULTURE
LIFE PROJECTS
ONGOING INITIATIVES