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1 December 2016 – At a critical meeting opening tomorrow, the United Nations will call on decision
makers from more than 190 countries to step up efforts to halt the loss of biodiversity and protect the
ecosystems that support food and water security and health for billions of people.
At the UN Biodiversity Conference in Cancún, Mexico, parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity
(CBD) begin two weeks of discussions in the shadow of data and reports showing that around two-thirds
of the global Aichi Biodiversity Targets are currently not on track to be met by the 2020 deadline, with
serious consequences for human well-being, unless enhanced efforts are made in the last four years of the
decade.

The Aichi Targets specify actions to protect and sustainably use the entire variety of life on our planet.
The targets address issues ranging from the loss of natural habitats, sustainable agriculture and declining
fish stocks, to access and sharing of the benefits from the use of genetic resources, indigenous knowledge
and awareness of the values of biodiversity.

Achievement of the Aichi Targets will be critical for achieving the three other historic global agendasagreed last year, the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its Sustainable Development Goals(SDGs), the Sendai Framework on Disaster Risk Reduction and the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.Ahead of the 13th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity more than 120 ministers of environment, agriculture, forestry, fisheries and tourism will discuss the mainstreaming of biodiversity into their activities by ensuring the alignment of wider Government policies, programmes and plans consistent with the need to conserve and sustainably use biodiversity.

“If we are going to save biodiversity, we need to work with these sectors that depend on biodiversity and
whose activities have a considerable impact on the variety of life on our planet.” Dr. Braulio Ferreira de
Souza Dias, CBD Executive Secretary said.
“Agriculture, forestry, fisheries and tourism are important sectors whose activities need to take
biodiversity conservation and sustainable use into account in a coherent manner.” 
 “Governments have made ambitious commitments to achievement of the Aichi Biodiversity Targets, but
these declarations need to be matched with actions at the national level.” Erik Solheim, Chief of UN
Environment said. “If countries do not ensure that national targets are set and achieved, their ambition
will only remain on paper.”

Sir Robert Watson, Chair of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and
Ecosystem Services said, “The Aichi Targets must be achieved, because biodiversity and ecosystems
services are central to human well-being.”
“The continued loss of biodiversity and degradation of ecosystem services will undermine our ability to
achieve many of the SDGs, in particular those on poverty alleviation, human health, as well as food and
water security.”

The meeting will review the progress that has been made towards the implementation of the Strategic Plan
for Biodiversity 2011-2020, the achievement of the Aichi Targets, as well as related means of
implementation. It will also identify actions needed to meet the Targets at the national level.
One of the major challenges countries still face is aligning national plans with the generally more
ambitious global targets. For example, progress is being made towards achieving Aichi Target 11 with
protected areas increasingly being designated. However, only half of the countries have set national
targets that are at least as ambitious as the Aichi Targets.

Rafael Pacchiano Alamán, Minister of Environment and Natural Resources of Mexico said, “Mexico is
firmly committed to achieving Aichi Target 11, which we expect to meet in advance, as we are making
every effort to ensure that by 2018, 17% of land areas and 10% of Mexico's maritime and coastal areas are
under protection.”
“The government of President Enrique Peña Nieto welcomes the representatives of all the countries
participating in The UN Biodiversity Conference and wishes that these two weeks of work to be fruitful
for the future of humanity.”

Mainstreaming Biodiversity
The CBD calls on countries to integrate conservation and the sustainable use of biodiversity into relevant
sectoral or cross-sectoral plans, programmes and policies – a process often referred to as biodiversity
mainstreaming.
As proposed by Mexico, as host to the 13th meeting of the Conference of the Parties, agriculture, forestry,
fisheries and tourism, will be discussed at the conference. All heavily depend on biodiversity and healthy
ecosystems, and at the same time often have a severely negative impact on them. Mainstreaming
biodiversity within these sectors is essential to ensure their continued economic viability and to stem the
loss of biodiversity.
The meetings of the Convention and its Protocols will decide on some of the most pressing issues for the
conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity, including:
Marine Life
Governments will address the marine agenda, with discussions about new reports on the impact of marine
debris and underwater noise on biodiversity. Additional research on Ecologically or Biologically
Significant Marine Areas (EBASs) on the high seas will also be presented.
Ecosystem Restoration 
Discussions will also take place on adoption of an action plan and the mobilization of resources for
ecosystem restoration towards achieving Aichi Targets 5, 12, 14 and 15; Targets 4 and 8 of the Global
Strategy for Plant Conservation, as well as other internationally-agreed goals and targets, such as the land
degradation neutrality goal under the UN Convention to Combat Desertification.
Bio-synthetics
The emerging field of synthetic biology, in the context of the three objectives of the CBD, will also be
addressed at the meeting. There are several applications where components, organisms and products of
synthetic biology such as bioenergy, agriculture, pharmaceuticals and chemical production may interact
with biodiversity with both positive and negative impacts at different levels, including genetic, species and
ecosystems.
Pollinators
The ‘Thematic Assessment of Pollinators, Pollination and Food Production’ by the Intergovernmental
Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) will also be discussed. The
two-year study, the first ever assessment issued by IPBES, found that as much as $577 billion in annual
global crop production is directly attributable to animal pollination, with three-quarters of the world's food
crops relying, at least in part, on pollinating insects and other animals, many of which are now facing
population decline and extinction.

The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety and the Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit-Sharing
Governments will look at the steps for further implementation of these protocols to the Convention, with a
focus on ways to promote capacity-building and enhance national implementation. Progress towards
achievement of Aichi Target 16, which deals with the Nagoya Protocol, will be a particular focus. 


Further information on the Thirteenth Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity can be found here. 

All documents and information relating to the meeting can be found at: www.cbd.int/COP2016

Live and on demand webcasts of negotiations, press conferences and selected side events are available at: www.cbd.int/cop2016/webcast/

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