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"The
Convention on Biological Diversity is like a ship drifting without a captain to
steer it," said Martin Kaiser, Greenpeace Political Advisor on
Forests. "The negotiations have
failed to chart a course to stop biopiracy, provide additional financing for
protected areas, establish marine reserves on the high seas and to ban illegal
logging and trade."
Although
the president of the COP8, Brazil's environment minister Marina Silva, opened
the conference calling for legislation against biopiracy, Australia, New
Zealand and Canada have argued against strict deadlines for the negotiations.
"This simply buys time for pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies to
secure patents on life under the regime of the World Trade Organisation,"
said Kaiser.
At
their last conference, the CBD member States agreed to establish a global
network of protected areas, in order to safeguard life on earth and prevent the
industrial exploitation of the world's biodiversity at the expense of future
generations. Money was promised by the rich countries to help make this happen.
"Both
rich and developing countries have not delivered on their promises, and the
proposed global network of protected areas has not become a reality." said
Paulo Adario, Greenpeace Amazon Campaign Coordinator. "Instead, governments have put nature at risk and allowed
it to become a private commodity."
At the
beginning of the conference, Greenpeace presented a roadmap to recovery, a
global map of the last intact forests, and a network of marine reserves on the
high seas (1), calling governments to take action. This challenge has been
ignored.
The
conference has not been able to address a core business of every government,
eradicating illegal and unsustainable logging and fisheries." The need for
a moratorium on high seas bottom trawling, the most destructive form of
fishing, is now being blocked by a few key countries, who are prioritising
their industry interests over the protection of marine biodiversity" said
Karen Sack, Greenpeace Political Advisor on Oceans.
Despite
the exploitation of the Amazon by illegal and destructive logging providing
timber products to internal and external markets, the Brazilian government has
blocked any meaningful collaboration at a regional and international level.
"This
conference has been overshadowed by the announcement of the United States, the
largest contributor to the funding body for biodiversity, that it will halve
its financial contribution," concluded Kaiser. "Four years ago, world leaders committed themselves to
rescue life on earth by 2010. Many plans and programmes are in place, but the
financial support for developing countries is not provided yet."
Greenpeace
is an independent, campaigning organisation that uses non-violent, creative
confrontation to expose global environmental problems, and to force solutions
essential to a green and peaceful future.
(1) For more information on the oceans maps see: http://oceans.greenpeace.org/highseas-report
http://oceans.greenpeace.org/highseas-map
For more information on the forest maps see
http://www.intactforests.org
http://www.greenpeace.org/forestmaps