eiji tanaka · 2018. 12. 10. · eiji tanaka satoyama initiative coordinator, united nations...
TRANSCRIPT
Satoyama Initiative’s Contribution towards
Post 2020 Global Biodiversity Framework
Eiji Tanaka
Satoyama Initiative Coordinator, United Nations University Institute for
the Advanced Study of Sustainability (UNU-IAS)
Focus Session 2,
6th Global Biodiversity Summit of Local and Subnational Governments,
CBD COP 14, SHARM EL SHEIKH, EGYPT
Sharm El Sheikh International Congress Center, 23 November 2018, 16:00h -
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The Satoyama Initiative
A decision recognizing the Satoyama Initiative, proposed by UNU and the Japanese government, was adopted at CBD COP 10 held in Nagoya City, Aichi Pref., Japan.
IPSI Launching Ceremony (Aichi-Nagoya), 2010
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• A global effort to realize “societies in harmony with nature”
• Revitalization and sustainable management of landscapes and seascapes for people and nature
The International Partnership for the Satoyama
Initiative (IPSI): a global platform to promote
networking and collaboration on Socio-Ecological
Production Landscape and Seascapes (SEPLS).
UNU-IAS serves as IPSI Secretariat.
Promotes networking, collaboration and research that
contributes to CBD processes.
The Satoyama Initiative
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Promotes “landscape approach” for biodiversity conservation: Socio-ecological Production Landscapes and Seascapes (SEPLS)
• Support biodiversity while providing humans
with the goods and services needed for their
well-being
• Mutual benefits between human production
and nature
• Dynamic mosaics of habitats and land uses
• Deeply linked to local culture and knowledge
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IPSI Membership
Ecosystem types of SEPLS case studies
(172 case studies on IPSI website)
by organization type
Growth of IPSI membership, broken down by organization type
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IPSI Global Conference
• Enhance understanding and raise awareness of the importance of SEPLS
• Strengthen collaboration and synergies among members and other interested persons
Regional Workshop
• Share the concept of the Satoyama Initiative
• Discuss regionally shared issues and solutions and create synergies
IPSI: A Platform for Collaboration and Knowledge Sharing on SEPLS
IPSI-2 (Nairobi, Kenya)
IPSI-3 (COP11)(Hyderabad, India)
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
IPSI Launch (Nagoya, Japan) (COP10)
IPSI-1(Nagoya, Japan)
IPSI-4(Fukui, Japan)
IPSI-5 (COP12)(PyeongChang, Republic of Korea)
IPSI-6(Siem Reap,
Cambodia)
Asia(Kathmandu, Nepal)
Europe (Florence, Italy)
Africa (Accra, Ghana)
Latin America & Caribbean (Cusco, Peru)
Asia(Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia)
Mar
Mar
Oct
May
Sept
May
Aug
JanJun
Apr
Oct
Oct
Global Conference
Regional Workshop
2018Sep
5
2019Sep
IPSI-8(Kumamoto,
Japan )
IPSI-7(Kanazawa, Japan)
Thematic Consultation (tbd)
Landscape Approach(Japan)
IPSI-7 29 Sep – 2 Oct 2018, Kanazawa City, Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan Organized by: IPSI Secretariat and MoEJHosted by: Ishikawa Prefecture
“Satoyama Initiative’s contributions towards achieving the Aichi Biodiversity Targets and SDGs”
Group photo (130 participants from 27 countries)
Key outcomes:
• “Ishikawa Statement 2018”: IPSI will further commit to promoting the importance of SEPLS in the post-2020 global biodiversity framework
• Call for engagement of government at all levels for successful mainstreaming
• Landscape and seascape approaches can also contribute to multiple global challenges such as conservation, food security, poverty reduction, Eco-DRR
• Although lacking base-line data, IPSI members try to assess achievement and contribution:
• 57 indicators used by IPSI members, some can be used for future survey “Ishikawa Statement 2018”
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Satoyama Initiative Contributes to Achieving CBD Aichi Biodiversity Targets (2010-2020)
Contribution to Global Goals by Satoyama Initiative
Achieving the ABTs can also contribute to achieving SDGs (2015-2030) 7
IPSI Collaborative Activities
Satoyama Development Mechanism (SDM)30 seed funding projects since 2013
- with MOEJ & IGES
GEF-Satoyama Project10 Site-Based Sub-grant Projects
- with GEF, IGES, Conservation International Japan
SEPLS Resilience Indicators ToolkitUsed in about 40 countries
- with UNDP, IGES, Biodiversity International
Satoyama Initiative Thematic Review39 Case studies, 4 Volumes since 2015
- With IGES
IPSI
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©Nature and Livelihood, Uganda
©Dorji Singay)
We have 47 Collaborative Activities
Working in partnerships to find local solutions for global challenges
IPSI’s Possible Contributions to Post-2020
IPSI continues to emphasize landscape/seascape approaches, because SEPLS can:
contribute to in-situ conservation through sustainable usebalance conservation with socio-economic aspirations complement Protected Areas (PAs) and Other Effective Area-based
Measures (OECMs) and make them more effective act as buffers and corridor between PAs and OECMs
IPSI can promote mainstreaming of biodiversity in other sectors Enhance synergies with other UN and international organizations like
FAO, UNESCO and IPBES
IPSI can help connect Biodiversity Targets with SDGs to provide solutions for related global challenges including poverty reduction, gender, climate change, Eco-DRR etc.
Hold a thematic consultation on SEPLS in late 2019 to make inputs to post-2020 framework discussion
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2010-2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022-
Negotiations on post-2020 plan
CBD COP 10-12CBD COP 13 CBD COP 14 CBD COP 15
IPSI Implementation:
CBD Events and Processes:
SDGsAichi Targets
IPSI Roadmap
• Implementation
• Consolidation
• Establishment
• Growth
Phase 1: Phase 2:
Post-2020 plan
SBSTTA-21WG8J-10
SBSTTA-22SBI-2
SBSTTA-23WG8J-11
SBSTTA-24SBI-3
IPSI Events:IPSI-7SC-13
IPSI-8SC-14Thematic Consultation (tbd)
SC-12RegionalWorkshop
IPSI-9SC-15
Input
SC-11RegionalWorkshop
IPSI-6
1(COP 14)
2(to COP 15)
3(COP 15)
4(after COP 15)
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