This Week in Biodiversity: Everyone’s Making Headlines
The National Mitigation Banking Conference was not the only thing making headlines this past month in biodiversity. Biodiveristy news popped up all over the place, from the US to Australia to the Caucacus. Read on for the full details in this month’s Mitigation Mail.

NOTE: This article has been reprinted from Ecosystem Marketplace’s Mitigation Mail newsletter. You can receive this summary of global news and views from the world of biodiversity automatically in your inbox here.
14 May 2011 | Last week, US mitigation banking stakeholders gathered at the National Mitigation Banking Conference in Baltimore, Maryland. Some of the hot topics of the conference included the implementation of the 2008 final rule on compensatory mitigation, the effect of the economy and reduced federal budget on the mitigation banking industry, whether new wetland regulation guidelines would increase demand for mitigation banking, and continued frustration with data transparency from regulators. Keep your eye out on the Ecosystem Marketplace main page, where we’ll be covering these and other topics at the forefront of US biodiversity market development.
Outside of the US, we’ve just learned that the European Commission has incorporated new language on ‘no net loss’ into their EU biodiversity strategy related to meeting the 2020 goals of the Convention on Biological Diversity.
We are in the middle of collecting information on biodiversity market drivers around the world for a 2011 Update of the State of Biodiversity Markets, set to launch next month. Through the end of the month, Ecosystem Marketplace will assemble a coalition of sponsors for the 2011 report. Read more about sponsorship opportunities for the State of Biodiversity Markets: 2011 Update, or contact Becca Madsen for more information.
Finally, check out the upcoming AFF/WRI conference Ecosystem Markets: Making them Work (June 29-July 1, Madison, Wisconsin) to share experience in environmental markets with other US market participants.
Read on for the latest on incentives for biodiversity conservation around the world.
—The Ecosystem Marketplace Team
If you have comments or would like to submit news stories, write to us at [email protected].
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Roundtable Aims at Cohesion in New Zealand and Australia
Roundtable discussions, convened by Australia’s National Environmental Law Association and New Zealand’s Resource Management Law Association are aiming to improve cohesion between biodiversity market mechanisms both across and between the two countries. The Environmental Law Roundtable of Australia and New Zealand represents a high-level push for full stakeholder engagement and coordination, and it’s happening remarkably early in the game compared to other countries’ biodiversity compensation policies. –
What Part of “No Net Loss” Does Alberta Not Understand?
The Canadian province of Alberta is chopping up its countryside to extract valuable oilsands, and its longstanding wetland policy of “no net loss” means that oil companies should be offsetting the damage by restoring wetlands across the province. But recently, the government decided to re-evaluate its policy and determined that “no net loss” only applied to settled areas, or the ‘White’ zone, not to the vast amount of Crown (public) lands in Alberta which account for approximately 60% of the province, or the ‘Green’ zone. Finalized regulations come out in 2011 or 2012, but ‘Green zone’ wetlands are unprotected til then – and it’s not looking good in the long term either. –
UPDATE: Florida Ruling Supports Water Quality Trading
A US federal judge in Florida has ruled in favor of the federal EPA’s plan to impose numeric limits on the amount of phosphorus and nitrogen running into the Everglades. It’s not only a victory for the Everglades, but could open the door to innovative water-quality trading mechanisms down the road. –
Proposed EU Biodiversity Strategy Supports Species Banking
The European Commission on Tuesday approved a new strategy for reversing biodiversity loss by 2020, in part by recognizing the economic value of nature’s services. The new strategy lays the groundwork for species banking across the European Union, but must first be approved by the European Council. –
US Aims to Expand Wetland Protection
US Supreme Court decisions of the past decade have left wetland regulations unclear and unenforced. New clean water guidance from the Obama administration aims to provide clarity and expand enforcement while not contradicting the decisions. The result could be improved protection of drinking water – and expanded use of markets to aid that protection. –
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Rio 2012 Earth Summit outcomes vital for good transition
20 years after the first Earth summit in Rio de Janeiro another meeting is set to occur in the Brazilian city 2012. The meeting will focus on the transition to a ‘green economy’. Victor Anderson, in his ‘Good Transition’ blog for the Guardian, writes about the legacy of the 1992 Earth Summit, and why the 2012 Summit is so important in transitioning toward an environmentally sustainable future.
EU Biodiversity Bullseye
Back in 2001 the EU pledged to reverse biodiversity loss by 2010. The plan fell far short of its goals, despite the implementation of a number of EU wide policies, such as Natura 2000, the worlds largest network of protected areas. The EU announced its new plan to halt and reverse biodiversity loss on the 3rd of May. Reflecting the EU’s interest in ecosystem services, the plan is called “Our life insurance, our natural capital: an EU biodiversity strategy to 2020”, and relies heavily on the concepts of ‘natural capital’ and ‘ecosystem services’. The communication released by the European Commission calls for the use of innovative financing in funding the effort, including payments for ecosystem services. 2020 is set as a headline target to have achieved six targets, each having a number of concrete deliverables, such as restoring at least 15 % of degraded ecosystems. The EU hopes the targets will be enough to reach their own mandate and the mandate set by the Convention on Biological Diversity. –
Launch of Guide to Corporate Ecosystem Valuation (CEV)
The World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBSCD) has released the Guide to Corporate Ecosystem Valuation (CEV), a set of guidelines that will help companies better understand how their business practices impact, and are impacted by, ecosystem services. A collaboration between Environmental Resources Management, the World Resources Institute, International Union for Conservation of Nature, and Price Waterhouse Coopers, the WBSCD sees this guide as “operationalizing” the information found in last year’s TEEB (The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity) reports. The guide was road-tested with 14 companies, including high profile names like Rio Tinto and Hitachi. –
Government gives £25M boost to global wildlife initiative
The Darwin project, under the United Kingdom’s Department of Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs, has received an additional £25 million to support its projects around the world. 728 Darwin projects have been established around the world in areas of concentrated biodiversity that are under threat since the Rio Convention in 1992. The £25 million will be delivered over the next four years and new bids for the latest round of funding are now open. –
How to Save the Endangered Species (Act)
There’s a spirited debate over at the New York Times on how to improve endangered species protections in the US. Habitat destruction and climate change are pushing a number of species closer to the brink of extinction. But they likely won’t make it on the federal endangered species list any time soon: the US Fish and Wildlife Service says it’s overwhelmed with a backlog of petitions, and has even asked Congress to legally limit the amount of resources the agency can put toward processing the petitions, to free up funds for other conservation efforts.
The debaters assembled include a number of environmental law professors and think-tankers and their suggestions range from “Look at species in groups – categorized by ecosystem, say, or by common threats,” (Lisa Heinzerling of Georgetown University) to “Blame the partisan environmentalists!” (Steven Hayward of the American Enterprise Institute).
EU Looks to Link Farm Subsidies to Biodiversity Protection
The European Commission will release a policy paper on May 4 that sets out a framework for linking agricultural aid to biodiversity protection. The paper represents concrete steps to meet the EU’s new goal of halting biodiversity loss by 2020. Up to 60 percent of EU farmland will be subject to the proposed rules, which would require them to implement environmentally-friendly agricultural practices in exchange for continued subsidies; meanwhile, fisheries will have much stricter catch shares. National governments will also be expected to put a total of €6 billion toward conservation at ‘Natura 2000’ sites.
Big Bucks in US Ecotourism
A new piece in Harvard Magazine sets the record straight on the value of ecotourism to the economy. “Americans spent more than $120 billion hunting, fishing, and wildlife watching in 2006,” the article points out. “That’s more than the Super Bowl. It’s more than professional football. It’s more than was spent on all spectator sports, amusement parks, casinos, bowling alleys, and ski slopes combined.” As for the argument that nature reserves erode a local tax base, it turns out that wildlife watching delivers around $9 billion annually in state and local tax revenues – plus all of the other ecosystem service benefits from those natural areas, like water purification and carbon sequestration.
Europe’s Wildlife Under Threat from Nitrogen, Study Warns
Nitrogen deposits from Europe’s agricultural sector is threatening biodiversity found in the Natura 2000 network, a collection of protected sites throughout the continent. More than 60% of the the sites receive unsustainable levels of airborne nitrogen pollution, impacting both animal and plant wildlife. A team of scientists, conservation and environmental managers and policy makers from across Europe, coordinated by the Stockholm Environment Institute at the University of York are recommending policies and actions that will limit the amount of aerial nitrogen pollution across Europe from agriculture.
CEMEX Reports Progress on Biodiversity Commitments
CEMEX has released its 2010 Sustainable Development Report, with good news for biodiversity. The building materials company has partnered with BirdLife International on a scoping study of impacts to biodiversity from cement and aggregates operations. CEMEX also announced that it is on track to meet its target of developing biodiversity rehabilitation plans for 100% of its quarries by 2015. –
Avon Products, Inc. Marks Earth Month with New “Palm Oil Promise” to Continue Mission to Help End Deforestation
Avon, maker of cosmetic products, have pledged to only use palm oil certified by the Roundable for Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO). The new “Palm Oil Promise” will use the GreenPalm credit system, which uses tradeable credits to ensure that can be sold by palm oil producers certified by the RSPO as sustainable. Palm oil expansion, particularly in Southeast Asia, has led to habitat destruction that threatens biodiversity. Greenpeace brought attention to the issue with this slightly disturbing ad (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QV1t-MvnCrA) targeted at food producer Nestle. Avon dodged the bullet by getting on the RSPO train. –
Brazil’s Cerrado Savanna Open for Agribusiness
Did you know that a third of Brazil’s biodiversity is found in its tropical savanna, the Cerrado, which according to the World Wide Fund for nature is biologically the richest savanna in the world? Apparently the Brazilian government doesn’t. As a Yale 360 post points out, the Cerrado gets little attention compared to the neighboring Amazon rain forest. Only two percent of the savanna is protected, and nearly 60 percent has already been converted for agriculture, with the rest under serious threat; as the piece notes, “Brazilian agriculturalists and ministers still talk as if it had no conservation value at all.” –
5M Euro Smackers for Biodiversity in the Caucacus
The German government has just announced that it’s partnering with corporate sponsors HSBC Armenia, ProCredit Bank Georgia, Nina Hovnanian Couture, and the Bank of Georgia to provide 5 million Euros in funding for protection of natural areas in Georgia, Armenia, and possibly Azerbaijan. The money will be channeled through the Caucasus Nature Fund and the Georgian and Armenian governments, and is expected to increase protected area land coverage in the region from 100,000 ha in 2010 to 400,000 ha by 2013. –
NZ: Biodiversity policy a ‘timebomb’
Councillors in New Zealand’s Waitaki District are concerned that proposed national-level conservation law, the National Policy Statement for Indigenous Biodiversity, could affect the planning of new agricultural development. The law would require councils to undertake the assessment of conservation values within their districts and enact plans to ensure no net loss of areas deemed valuable. –
Mangroves: Better for Your Local Economy than a New Airport
Costa Rica’s Térraba-Sierpe National Wetlands are the biggest remaining mangrove forests in Central America. But the region lacks a management plan, and is facing threats including a new international airport project backed by the national government, and a dam for hydropower. The only way to save the mangroves was to show developers that the mangrove’s ecosystem values could stand up against the supposedly economy-boosting hydropower and airport projects, says Azur Moulaert, leader of the ECOTICOS initiative spearheading the valuation project. “When the developers come in and say ‘we’re going to do a hundred million dollar project,’” explains Moulaert, “Our work says that the mangrove produces five hundred million worth of ecosystem services a year.” The strategy has paid off – thanks to ECOTICOS’ work, a management plan for the Térraba-Sierpe wetlands was finally approved, and development has been tabled for now.
US MITIGATION NEWS
Wildlands Restores 186 acres of Native Fish Habitats in California’s Delta Gasp! Published wetland mitigation credit prices?
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USGS and Ecosystem Services
EVENTS
Valuing Nature Network workshops – 2011 Yale Conservation Finance Camp – Training Course for Mitigation Banking and In-lieu Fee Program Interagency Review Teams Ecosystem Markets: Making them Work – Ecosystem Services in Urban Areas Seminar 2011 The National Conference on Ecosystem Restoration – Earth Stewardship: Preserving and enhancing the earth’s life-support systems 13th BIOECON Annual Conference Ecosystem Services: Integrating Science and Practice 4th International ESP Conference UNEP-FI Global Roundtable “The Tipping Point: Sustained Stability in the Next Economy”
JOB OPENINGS
Project Manager: Biodiversity and Agricultural Markets Specialist
EcoAgriculture Partners is an international non-profit organization that works to facilitate sustainable food production, rural livelihoods, and environmental conservation globally. EcoAgriculture seeks to hire a Project Manager to join our committed team in our Washington, D.C., headquarters as soon as possible. The Project Manager will lead EcoAgriculture’s contribution to an international project focused on improving the conservation outcomes of agricultural production systems for major commodity crops including palm oil, soybeans, sugar cane, and coffee.
Programme Manager (Responsible Product) The Forest Trust has been working with retailers and importers in Europe and Asia for 12 years and is currently seeking to recruit a Programme Manager based in the UK. Manager, Finance & Budgeting, Sustainable Agriculture Division
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