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Natural Resources Division

Biodiversity as a driver of sustainable transformation in
Latin America and the Caribbean

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Contents

Editorial

On 19 December 2022, a potentially landmark agreement for multilateral environmental aspirations was reached with the adoption, under the aegis of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), of the new Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (Kunming-Montreal Framework or Global Biodiversity Framework) and other accords as a transformative roadmap for the current decade to curb biodiversity loss and environmental degradation.

 

The new Kunming-Montreal Framework to align global, regional, national and subnational commitments and efforts is of the utmost importance for Latin America and the Caribbean, one of the world’s most biologically and culturally rich regions, which face enormous social, economic and environmental challenges. The biodiversity crisis is one of today’s greatest planetary crises and is interrelated with other cascading crises and challenges, including climate change, worsening poverty and inequality, social and geopolitical conflicts and health-related risks. The disconnect between economic growth and social and environmental well-being also requires structural changes that integrate the three interdependent pillars of sustainable development, whose transformative potential lies in combining the economic, social and environmental dimensions (Harris and others, 2023).

 

For this reason, we devote this bulletin to a review of the contributions of biodiversity to the region’s development and well-being and to the new multilateral biodiversity Framework recently adopted; it is estimated, for example, that “environmental income” from forest and non-forest extraction in rural households in the region accounts for 31% of total income, a higher proportion than in any other region of the world. The bulletin reviews the context of the negotiations, the main strengths and challenges of the new Global Biodiversity Framework, the rights-based approach, synergy between the Framework and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the potential contribution of the United Nations economic regions in promoting the cross-sectoral mainstreaming of biodiversity and the potential contribution of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) to addressing the main biodiversity challenges in Latin America and the Caribbean.

 

Main article


Biodiversity as a driver of sustainable transformation in
Latin America and the Caribbean

Biodiversity “silently” sustains humanity’s well-being

 

Human well-being depends to a large extent on the goods and services provided by biodiversity and its ecosystems, a concept known as “nature’s contributions to people” and also as “ecosystem services” (IPBES, 2019). However, biodiversity processes are in many ways “silent” and “invisible” (hard to see), difficult to quantify at different levels (genes, species and ecosystems) and widely variable through time. This partly explains why modern human societies have not included nature as a strategic component in development planning, institutions and the market (Dasgupta, 2021).

 

Unlike other processes, such as ozone thinning or climate change, which may yet be reversible, the biodiversity crisis in certain places is of such a magnitude that the accumulating changes in ecosystem richness, structure and function are at potentially irreversible levels or have already reached irreversibility (IPBES, 2018 and 2019). Scientists, civil society organizations and governments have issued numerous warnings about the delay in prioritizing addressing the crisis of biodiversity loss and environmental degradation and have underscored the seriousness of its potential consequences. Inaction or insufficient action is due in part to the difficulty of implementing cross-cutting responses in a systemic manner. Although there are multiple policy instruments that address different areas of production and consumption individually, there has been a delay in the full implementation of those policies in the region (UNEP, 2020). Image 1 compares the impact of a coherent interlinked system of change to the current inertial or business-as-usual approach.

Image 1 

Model of the impact of a system of coherent and interlinked changes

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Source: Prepared by the authors, on the basis of PEW Charitable Trusts/SYSTEMIQ, Breaking the Plastic Wave: A comprehensive assessment of pathways towards stopping ocean plastic pollution, 2020. The business-as-usual trajectory reflects the current inertial approach.

 

Events, featured publications and news

Water

 

 

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Oportunidades de la economía circular
en el tratamiento de aguas residuales
en América Latina y el Caribe


100 p. | December 2022

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Brechas, desafíos y oportunidades
en materia de agua y género en América Latina
y el Caribe


65 p. | December 2022

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Energy

 

 

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Pobreza energética en el Uruguay:
diagnóstico de brechas en el acceso equitativo
a energía de calidad


82 p. | March 2023

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Estudio sobre políticas energéticas para la promoción de las energías renovables en apoyo a la electromovilidad


63 p. | December 2022

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Non-renewable resources

 

 

 

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Lithium extraction and industrialization: opportunities and challenges for
Latin America and the Caribbean


44 p. | July 2023

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La institucionalidad y la regulación minera en los países andinos: Bolivia (Estado Plurinacional de), Chile, Colombia, Ecuador y Perú


77 p. | December 2022

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Agricultural development

 

 

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Acción climática en la agricultura: la experiencia de países miembros de la Plataforma de Acción Climática en Agricultura de Latinoamérica y el Caribe


111 p. | February 2023

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Cuenta satélite de bioeconomía para Costa Rica: Propuesta metodológica y aplicación práctica




69 p. | December 2022

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Biodiversity

 

 

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Experiences in Latin America and the Caribbean with mainstreaming biodiversity in the productive, economic and financial sectors


79 p. | December 2022

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Governance approaches and practices in Latin America and the Caribbean for transformative change for biodiversity


86 p. | December 2022

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Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC)

www.cepal.org/en/topics/natural-resources

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