Is This the “Paris Moment” for Global Biodiversity Protection?
Author
Craig M. Pease - Former Law School Professor
Former Law School Professor
Current Issue
Issue
3
Craig M. Pease

In two recent international bio-diversity accords, science is at once both prominent and diminished. Last December, the UN Convention on Biodiversity’s COP 15 agreed to the Kunming-Montreal Framework. In March, the Convention on the Law of the Sea reached an agreement to protect marine ecosystems. Both measures seek to halt the ongoing massive extinction of species, food webs, biota and biomes unambiguously caused by humans, and documented in an overwhelming scientific literature.

The Kunming-Montreal Framework cites to the “Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services,” itself grounded in thousands of technical papers and involving hundreds of scientists. Similarly, the Marine Biodiversity Framework requires “use of the best available science and scientific information,” language that harks back to the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

These words seem hopeful, but the reality is more hollow. Neither agreement has a real enforcement mechanism, triggered when parties act contrary to best available science. In stark contrast, the ESA not only provides specific statutory enforcement mechanisms, but there is also well-developed case law enforcing the ESA’s requirement of good science. It is especially ironic to critique these international agreements by citing favorably to American biodiversity law. The United States has yet to ratify the 1992 Convention on Biological Diversity or the ensuing Cartagena Protocol (on biotechnology safety) and the Nagoya Protocol (on sharing of genetic resources and profits). It is unlikely to ratify either of these new agreements.

Moreover, the marine treaty language requiring good science is buried in a lengthy list of other guiding principles, including ”equity,” “polluter pays,” “ecosystem[s],” and “precaution,” all worthy goals. Yet ours is a world of limited resources. By pursuing multiple goals, these treaties inevitably diminish, albeit implicitly and indirectly, resources and the related attention needed to develop good science.

My concern is not the short shrift given to science. In setting environmental policy, the institution of science and individual scientists deserve no more voice than any other institution, interest group, or individual. What does deserve great deference is reality. Knowledge derived from scientific research and inquiry—fully acknowledging its uncertainty, caveats, and errors—is perhaps the premier means our society has of understanding reality.

The Marine Biodiversity Framework seeks to not only protect genetic richness, but also research. It includes Article 9 (access to high seas for biodiversity research), Article 10 (required notice prior to undertaking scientific research), and Article 11 (sharing of research samples, sequences, and results).

These treaty provisions need to be read in light of the history of scientific colonialism. Though recent decades have seen significant reforms, there is a history of western scientists undertaking biodiversity research in Brazil, Mexico, and other countries without collaborating with local researchers. Likewise, there is a sordid history of commercialization of genetic resources coopted from Indigenous peoples.

The marine treaty provisions pertaining to commercialization of genetic resources pertain not just to scientific research and knowledge, but money. This is an entirely different beast. Though the full story is complicated, lobbying by the pharmaceutical industry played an important role in the failure of the United States to ratify past biodiversity treaties. Any serious attempt by the Senate to ratify the marine treaty will entail debate on the ways it limits multinational corporations from owning genetic intellectual property.

Elizabeth Mrema, then of the Convention on Biodiversity, has referred to the December agreement as the “Paris Moment for biodiversity.” The analogy is apt—and I would focus the reader’s attention on the utter and complete failure of the Paris climate accords to have any measurable impact on the inexorable rise in atmospheric carbon.

Likewise, since the Biodiversity Convention came into force after the Earth Summit, held in Brazil, there has been a significant reduction in area and ecological integrity of tropical rain forests. Worse, because of climate change, the South American rain forest is close to tipping to savannah, a less diverse ecosystem.

It is easy for diplomats and lawyers to write words. Yet it is not enough for treaties, statutes, and rules to cite science, and to provide a legal or administrative process for science to enter environmental decisionmaking. These two biodiversity agreements admittedly accomplish that.

These biodiversity treaties are state-of-the-art, and it is unrealistic to think we will ever see international biodiversity agreements qualitatively better. Yet the Amazon rain forest continues to burn. The dilemma humanity faces is that the best we can do is nowhere good enough.

Is This the “Paris Moment” for Global Biodiversity Protection?

Urgency is Required in Tackling Extinction, Biodiversity, Climate
Author
David P. Clarke - Writer
Writer
Current Issue
Issue
4
David P. Clarke

For the numerous plant and animal species endangered by human activities, 2022 could be a crucial year. That’s because this year three big international meetings are in play, potentially leading to much-needed actions.

In early November, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change will hold its 27th session of the Conference of the Parties, or COP 27. Later that month, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) will hold COP 19. And the Convention on Biological Diversity’s COP 15 was scheduled for October, although a new date is pending. At the CBD meeting, conferees are expected to adopt a post-2020 global biodiversity framework to replace the CBD’s Aichi Targets that for the most part have not been met.

While CITES’ remit is to control international trade in listed species to prevent overexploitation that would threaten their survival in the wild, the treaty is inextricably enmeshed with the broader climate change and biodiversity crises. Thus, with the three COP meetings, “It’s a big year,” says Tanya Sanerib, the Center for Biological Diversity’s international legal director. Because they are all happening at once, “How this all works together is the question of 2022.” At one level, CITES covers trade in tree species, thus overlapping with the significant climate change issue of deforestation. In addition, the more than $320 billion legal wildlife industry is associated with a carbon footprint from tons of shipping.

Getting climate into the CITES context is difficult because the treaty is narrow, but “we can’t sever biodiversity and climate,” Sanerib says. Getting government agencies out of their silos is essential, “and that’s happening,” she adds, though urging more creativity. In January 2021, President Biden committed to conserving 30 percent of U.S. lands and waters by 2030, a program explicitly aimed at combatting both the climate change and biodiversity crises. This April he announced a new $1 billion program to boost the 30 X 30 species recovery effort for this decade.

In response to a 2021 U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service request for comments on recommendations the United States might bring to CITES COP 19, a letter submitted by 15 conservation groups emphasized the “alarming” impacts that climate change and ecosystem collapse are having on the natural world. They cite a 2019 report by the 140-nation Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), which found that species extinction is accelerating globally faster than at any time during the past 10 million years as a result of land and sea use changes, climate change, direct exploitation, and other drivers.

CITES is failing to protect flora and fauna from the “non-climate stressor” of over-exploitation, the conservationists wrote in calling on FWS to take an approach that is more “bold and ambitious” than the Service’s approach to CITES listings in the past. By taking such a posture, FWS can minimize one major stressor and thereby increase endangered species’ future resilience to climate change, the groups wrote.

But at a time when FWS is being asked to step up its CITES efforts, many in the conservation community are frustrated by the lack of time for necessary in-depth discussions of conservation issues at CITES intersessional meetings, Sanerib says. Because the COP 19 agenda is so packed, FWS might not recommend any additional actions in November, a possibility raised in an earlier Federal Register notice. There, FWS references a significant number of on-going discussions and describes various issues on which the United States is “still undecided” about whether to submit proposals. Conservationists advocate restructuring CITES meetings as part of the “transformative change” the IPBES called for to halt the global extinction crisis.

An issue receiving significant attention is how CITES can reduce zoonotic diseases, such as Covid-19, which has killed more than six million people worldwide from over 500 million cases. Climate experts say such diseases will worsen as the planet warms and more habitat is destroyed. FWS’s notice states that a significant number of CITES-listed animals have “zoonotic potential,” and the United States believes CITES offers opportunities to reduce such risks.

However, in an April 15 letter to the U.S. CITES leadership team, seven conservation NGOs recommended maintaining CITES’ original mandate targeted at species overexploitation. Reducing future zoonotic disease risks is a dire need, the groups agree. But expanding the mandate to address such risks would burden nations’ workloads and inadequate budgets at a time when they must “tackle the extinction crisis with urgency.”

Urgency Is Required in Tackling Extinction, Biodiversity, Climate

ELI Report
Author
Akielly Hu - Environmental Law Institute
Environmental Law Institute
Current Issue
Issue
6

Environmental Liability Using civil lawsuits to protect biodiversity and expand the policy toolkit for conservation

The harmful exploitation of resources — including illegal wildlife trade, fishing, and logging — is one of the top two factors devastating global biodiversity and driving species to extinction. It damages rural livelihoods, robs countries of badly needed revenues, and undermines conservation efforts.

Most countries rely on criminal and administrative enforcement to counter illegal wildlife trade. While these responses can impose fines and imprisonment, they are not focused on remedying the environmental harm.

An international group of conservationists, lawyers, and economists, including ELI Visiting Scholar Carol Adaire Jones and ELI Vice President for Programs and Publications John Pendergrass, is now advocating for the use of environmental liability suits to counter the illegal exploitation of resources and protect biodiversity. Unlike criminal and administrative procedures, these suits can hold responsible parties liable for remedying the harm they have caused, through actions including habitat restoration, species protection, public apologies, and education.

Funded by the U.K. Government’s Illegal Wildlife Trade Challenge Fund and led by Jacob Phelps of Lancaster University, the team advocates that conservation liability suits be used strategically against defendants involved in illegal wildlife trade with the financial means to provide remedies. These include corporations and organized crime groups who are held accountable for restorative actions, typically as a complement to criminal prosecution.

In addition to publishing a paper in Conservation Letters, the team released a guide, Pioneering Civil Lawsuits for Harm to Threatened Species: A Guide to Claims With Examples From Indonesia, which is intended to inform NGOs, government officials, prosecutors, academics, and judges.

Prior ELI research highlighted that laws providing a legal right to remedy for a wide range of environmental harms are already in place in many biodiversity hotspots, including Brazil, China, Democratic Republic of Congo, Indonesia, Mexico, and more. However, these laws are seldom used for a number of reasons. In some cases, governance challenges such as corruption may be a factor. Other impediments include a lack of awareness of the law and a dearth of implementing guidance. In particular, one of the problems cited is difficulty in valuing the damages.

To address this issue, the guide builds on what is called the restoration-based approach for valuing claims. This method values damages based on the cost of restoration projects to remedy the harm to biodiversity and compensate for losses incurred until the resources recover, rather than placing a value on the harm done. Following the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill and the subsequent passage of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, the approach was pioneered in the regulations written to implement the OPA, for which ELI's Jones served as lead economist.

In the United States, the restoration-based approach to valuing damage claims — which has been widely adopted for other liability statutes — has been shown to expedite the restoration of resources after a case is resolved. This approach is also more readily transferable to developing countries than putting a dollar value on the harm.

The report guides practitioners and academics through key concepts and procedures for environmental liability lawsuits, including seeking, presenting, and executing legal remedies. The guide, journal article, and related policy resources can be found at conservation-litigation.org.

Cities can reduce food waste through climate action planning

Cities across the country have pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and develop climate action plans that outline the steps they will take to achieve these goals. However, most existing plans contain few, if any, food waste-related actions. A report by ELI in partnership with the Nashville Food Waste Initiative, A Toolkit for Incorporating Food Waste in Municipal Climate Action Plans, provides model provisions for addressing food waste in local planning, enabling cities to reduce both food waste and greenhouse gas emissions simultaneously.

Climate action plans offer an ideal opportunity for cities to address food waste, a major — yet often overlooked — contributor to climate change. In 2019, 35 percent of food in the United States went unsold or uneaten, leaving a greenhouse gas footprint equal to 4 percent of U.S. emissions. Research by Project Drawdown has identified reducing food waste as one of the top three most impactful solutions for reducing greenhouse gas emissions worldwide.

Addressing food waste also garners many benefits beyond climate change mitigation. Reducing wasted food alleviates food insecurity, conserves natural resources, and saves money by decreasing food purchasing and waste disposal costs.

The toolkit provides a menu of options that includes measures to prevent food waste, rescue surplus food, and recycle food scraps. It is intended to facilitate the widespread adoption of food waste provisions in local climate action and sustainability plans by truncating the time and effort that would be required if a municipality had to start from scratch.

In addition to providing model provisions, the toolkit includes links to example provisions in existing sustainability plans. Strategies and approaches highlighted in the toolkit include policies and ordinances, public awareness and education, incentives and funding, leadership and recognition initiatives, and environmental justice-related efforts.

Nature-based solutions minimize the impacts of disasters

Natural disasters pose a huge risk to people, ecosystems, and property — a risk that will only increase with climate change. One solution is to invest in nature-based hazard mitigation strategies, also referred to as natural or green infrastructure. These actions conserve or restore nature, such as wetlands and floodplains, or use green infrastructure projects like rain gardens, all to minimize the negative impacts of natural disasters.

Nature-based solutions can offer a more cost-effective alternative to “gray” infrastructure, which also increases habitat and biodiversity. Recently, a growing number of funding opportunities through the Federal Emergency Management Agency aim to encourage such strategies. However, to date relatively few nature-based projects have been funded with available grants.

Government entities can develop a strong foundation to apply for this funding by including nature-based strategies in their hazard mitigation plans. These plans are required of states, tribes, and locales for certain kinds of disaster mitigation funding, including grants from FEMA. Plans identify natural hazard risks to communities, create goals for hazard mitigation, and outline actions to address risks.

This spring, ELI released Nature-Based Mitigation Goals and Actions in State and Tribal Hazard Mitigation Plans, a study evaluating to what extent plans are incorporating nature-based goals and actions. Based on a review of all 50 states’ mitigation plans and a small subset of tribal plans, the report identifies a range of practices across jurisdictions, and analyzes areas for improvements in developing nature-based strategies. The study also includes specific plan language that could be used by governments in the future.

In tandem, ELI published an accompanying report, Nature-Based Mitigation Goals and Actions in Local Mitigation Plans, based on an analysis of over 100 local hazard mitigation plans. Both reports identify a number of paths to greater use of nature-based strategies. Although many plans include nature-based goals and actions, government entities can focus on planning for realistic prioritization of these projects. Funding, implementing, and monitoring these projects are also important next steps. Among other recommendations, more demonstration projects, including assessing outcomes with data and monitoring, can also exemplify the benefits of nature-based projects and encourage others to follow suit.

Using Liability Lawsuits to Protect Biodiversity.

Crisis of Phytoplankton and Insects Ushers in Age of Resource Conflict
Author
Craig M. Pease - Scientist and Law Professor
Scientist and Law Professor
Current Issue
Issue
2
Craig M. Pease

The Endangered Species Act is one of the strongest federal environmental statutes. It elevates conservation over economics and requires key decisions to be made based solely on the best available science. Yet its words matter only to the extent they protect real living organisms. By that metric, our entire legal regime to protect biodiversity has completely and utterly failed.

Science now bears witness to a global collapse of phytoplankton, the basis of aquatic food chains, and insects, a key element of terrestrial food chains. A huge fraction of their global population is now gone; see Daniel Boyce and colleagues’ 2010 article in Nature and Rudolfo Dirzo and colleagues’ 2014 Science paper, showing a very roughly 1 percent annual loss of phytoplankton and insect biomass, going back many decades. Compounded, a loss of that seemingly small amount results in a loss of 40 percent over the nearly half a century since the ESA was passed.

More recently, Jeffery McQuaid and colleagues’ Nature paper investigates phytoplankton decline and shows it is caused by increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide. Similarly, Bradford Lister and Andres Garcia’s recent Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper documents dramatic loss of insects over several decades in a tropical rain forest, also tying the decline to climate change.

This is a catastrophic collapse of global food webs. A scientist walking into a natural habitat most anywhere on Earth now sees something akin to a grocery store with shelf after shelf empty. As a biologist who has spent a fair amount of time in nature, I weep.

To match the new reality of the Earth’s natural resources, the whole approach of environmental law will have to change. The Endangered Species Act in the United States and international wildlife treaties were simply not adequate to prevent this collapse in food webs.

The very structure of Earth’s natural resources, and their relation to human society, are today qualitatively different than they were only a half century ago, when modern environmental law was born. I recall as a child seeing a six foot sturgeon taken from the Sacramento River, now depauperate and controlled, having been mustered into the service of providing water to California’s 40 million citizens.

Back then, environmental problems tended to be isolated to a specific location, and had a handful of identifiable causes. Yet over the past 50 years, human population, energy use, and economic activity have continued to grow exponentially, causing phytoplankton, insects and natural ecosystems generally to shrink. Not surprisingly, over this period the production of grains, a key element of human food webs, also increased exponentially.

What little remains of natural resources has become embedded in an immense snarl of human society and economic activity. Humans now dominate nature; see Peter Vitousek and colleagues’ 1997 Science paper, and the immense technical literature it has spawned. We have transitioned from a world where humans were scarce and nature dominated to one where nature is now becoming ever more scarce.

In describing resource seeking, ecologists distinguish between contest competition and scramble competition. Contest competition is often highly ritualized, and results in the winner getting complete control of the resource, as in sage grouse leks. Contest competition requires a stable and predictable resource, and it is typically mediated by hierarchies and other social structures. By contrast, scramble competition is a free-for-all, where each participant just grabs what they can, like buzzards feeding on a carcass.

Environmental law currently on the books, and as taught to our students, is most entirely contest competition — the law is but a complicated system of ritual combat, fought not with fancy feathers and strutting, but with words and arcane procedure, mediated by a highly hierarchal social structure.

We have now entered a new and different world. The phytoplankton, insects and natural world generally were formerly a stable, predictable, and abundant source of natural capital for human society, and hence a suitable subject for contest competition. Yet in the last half century, the Earth’s natural resources have suffered catastrophic losses. They have become ever smaller in extent, and less stable and less predictable, especially in comparison to ever growing human needs.

If environmental law is to remain relevant, it will have to transition from its current focus on management and regulation of predictable and generally abundant natural resources to resolution of conflicts over an increasingly scarce, chaotic, and ever dwindling nature.

As a biologist, I weep. The loss of species in my lifetime is incomprehensible.

Crisis of phytoplankton and insects ushers in age of resource conflict.

Environmental Liability

Liability for environmental harm is designed to compensate affected parties, with a particular focus on restoring or replacing injured resources and/or providing compensation for lost value. By increasing the costs for those who harm the environment, liability provisions can serve an important deterrent role, promoting compliance with laws and regulations. Liability provisions can also serve as gap-fillers, covering activities not specifically identified as illegal but nevertheless resulting in harm to the environment, livelihoods, and public health.

The Debate: Dangerous Intersection: Climate Change and National Security
Author
Francesco Femia - The Center for Climate and Security
Leo Goff - Center for Naval Analyses
Alice Hill - National Security Council
Thilmeeza Hussain - Voice of Women -- Maldives
Marcus King - George Washington University
Maureen Sullivan - Department of Defense
The Center for Climate and Security
Center for Naval Analyses
National Security Council
Voice of Women -- Maldives
George Washington University
Department of Defense
Current Issue
Issue
33

The dangers of climate change are not usually couched in terms of national security, but awareness of the issue is growing rapidly. What could be more basic to security than a climate conducive for agriculture, abundant water supplies, ecosystem health, industrial production, biodiversity, and human comfort? What could be more threatening than extreme weather events or mass migrations because of rising seas and crop failures? The annual ELI-Miriam Hamilton Keare Policy Forum brought together top experts on the topic.