Green Week: Fighting biodiversity loss will fail unless local and regional level is more widely implicated

Published: 4 June 2010 y., Friday

Klimato kaita
This year's Green Week is focusing on halting biodiversity loss, but the Committee of the Regions has warned that European and international efforts will continue to fail unless more is done to involve local and regional authorities in both the creation and implementation of policy.

Speaking after chairing a side event at Green Week on 2 June, the CoR's rapporteur on the future of biodiversity policy Linda Gillham (UK/EA), member of Runneymede Borough Council, said: “It is certainly true that halting biodiversity loss is a challenge for the entire planet, but both international and European efforts have been less than successful. In Europe, for example, just 17% of species classified as in need of protection are in fact protected, because although there is legislation in place – the Habitats Directive – it is often poorly implemented, and local and regional authorities need more support to ensure that they have the funds and the expertise to meet the directive's goals. At international level, meanwhile, the failure to halt biodiversity loss can be put down in part to the lack of coordination between different levels of government, with local and regional authorities in particular often left out when it comes to creating rules that they will eventually have to implement.

”But it is also at the local level that efforts to protect habitats and species are successfully taking place. Who better, then, to contribute to the global strategy on biodiversity than the local and regional authorities who are faced with tackling the issue on a daily basis?“

In her draft opinion on European biodiversity policy, Cllr Gillham calls for wider recognition of the role of local and regional authorities in tackling biodiversity loss, and for the new EU  biodiversity strategy post-2010 to include greater coordination between iEuropean, national and local levels. She also points out that EU funding for local and regional authorities in this field is often underused.

Cllr Gillham's draft opinion echoes the United Nations' call for local actors to get more involved. ”I welcome the calls from the United Nations for local and regional levels of government to take part in the COP10 meeting in Nagoya, Japan, next October – the 10th meeting of the signatories of the UN's Convention on Biological Diversity – at which a new declaration on fighting biodiversity loss is expected to be signed, and which, I hope, will explicitly recognise their role.

“It would also be a strong signal on the part of the EU if a representation from the CoR were to attend COP10 as part of the EU delegation – as was the case for the COP15 on climate change in Copenhagen last year – and I am pleased that the UN representation in Brussels has given us its support in this endeavour.”

Cllr Gillham's draft opinion is due to be adopted at next week's CoR Plenary Session on 9 June. 

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

“National leaders failed at Copenhagen: local leaders must not”: CoR launches unique database of local climate action

A new initiative from the Committee of the Regions (CoR) will help signatories of the Covenant of Mayors turn their commitment to cut greenhouse gas emissions into a concrete reality, as local leaders push ahead with plans to tackle climate change despite the failure of Copenhagen. more »

EU conference: 500 cities pledge to reduce CO2 by more than 20%

More than 500 European mayors will commit tomorrow to cut CO2 emissions by more than 20% by 2020. more »

Rain deluges southern U.S.

At least five people are dead and hundreds more have been evacuated as heavy rains brought flash flooding to Tennessee. Jon Decker reports. more »

Obama visits massive oil spill site

With a massive oil slick bearing down on the U.S. Gulf Coast, President Barack Obama visited southern Louisiana and sharpened his criticism of BP. more »

Reforming Ethiopia’s Justice System

The justice system in Ethiopia has generally been characterized by delays in dispensation and a lack of institutional capacity in both law enforcement and the judiciary. more »

French farmers' tractor protest

Thousands of french farmers took their tractors to the streets in Paris to draw attention to the falling income that could put them out of business. more »

The EU strengthens visa cooperation with Georgia

The European Commission today proposed the conclusion of visa facilitation and readmission agreements with Georgia. more »

Congratulation message of President Barroso to Viktor Orbán on his election victory

President Barroso this evening phoned Viktor Orbán to congratulate him personally, emphasising his clear election victory, based on a pro-European programme and a strong commitment to European values. more »

President Barroso's visit to China, 29 April – 1st May

On Wednesday 29 April, the President of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, will embark on his first trip to China since the start of the new Commission, giving continuation to the close cooperation established in the past 5 years. more »

Spain calls an extraordinary meeting of transport ministers to give impetus to a 'single European sky'

The Spanish Minister of Public Works, José Blanco, has announced in Madrid that the Spanish Presidency of the EU has called an extraordinary meeting of the Transport Council for 4 May, with the backing of the Commission, to give impetus to introducing a 'single European sky', in the wake of the recent air-traffic crisis caused by the volcanic cloud. more »