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Global biodiversity loss put at 5 trillion dollars a year
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 29 - 05 - 2008


An economic value needs to be placed on
biodiversity loss with the aim of creating appropriate markets and
improving efficiency, experts Thursday told a UN biodiversity
conference being held in Bonn, according to dpa.
Development economist Pavan Sukhdev put the annual loss to the
world economy at up to 3.1 trillion euros (4.8 billion dollars) in
lost capital over the first half of this century.
Taking just forest biomes, for which considerable data had been
collected, Sukhdev said that by 2050, if current policies were
continued, the global loss in gross domestic product terms would
amount to 6 per cent.
"This is just in direct and indirect use values - food, water
collection, flood prevention and so on... It does not include non-use
values, such as ethical values," said the economist who has
previously conducted a similar study for the Indian government.
Sukhdev presented an interim report entitled The Economics of
Ecosystems and Biodiversity to the conference, which is being
attended by 6,000 delegates from 200 countries.
The report, commissioned by EU Environment Commissioner Stavros
Dimas and German Environment Minister Sigmar Gabriel, said new ways
of "valuing nature" needed to be found to provide an economic basis
for the protection of ecosystems.
Gabriel noted that little progress had been made on the UN's
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and attributed this in part
to the lack of an economic valuation of what was being lost.
"We need to place a value on biodiversity to ensure efficient
use," he said.
This should not be understood as merely looking for new ways to
make profits, the German environment minister said. But appealing
purely to ethical standards had only limited effect.
Dimas referred to a "strong moral imperative" for humankind to
protect and conserve the world and said evidence was increasingly
emerging that humanity was suffering measurable effects from its poor
husbandry in the past.
Sukhdev's report found a close link between poverty and the loss
of ecosystems and warned that the "business as usual" approach would
mean the loss of vast natural areas and of the species in them.
"We find poverty and the loss of ecosystems and biodiversity to be
inextricably intertwined," it said.
The main immediate beneficiaries of ecosystems and biodiversity
were the poor, with the livelihoods most affected being subsistence
farming, animal husbandry, fishing and informal forestry, it said.
The report called for those who contribute to maintaining
sensitive ecosystems to be allowed to share in the benefits. Economic
tools needed to be developed to measure the costs and benefits of
conservation.
It was critical of current agricultural policy in the
industrialized world. "We need to rethink today's subsidies to
reflect tomorrow's priorities," it said.
Continuing along the current path would mean that by 2050, 11 per
cent of the natural areas left in 2000 would be lost to agriculture
or as a result of climate change.
In addition, 40 per cent of land under low impact agriculture in
2000 would be converted to intensive agriculture with resultant loss
of biodiversity.
And 60 per cent of coral reefs would succumb to fishing,
pollution, disease and the unintended introduction of invasive alien
species, apart from the bleaching effects resulting from higher
temperatures caused by climate change.
Since 1900, the world had lost 50 per cent of its wetlands, with
the damage in the first half of the 20th century being done in
northern countries, while the pressure was now on tropical and
subtropical wetlands, it said.
The Sukhdev report noted that the current focus by economists and
governments on economic growth as measured by gross domestic product
failed to take key aspects of the economy into account.
"GDP growth does not capture many vital aspects of national wealth
and wellbeing, such as changes in the quality of health, the extent
of education, and changes in the quality and quantity of our natural
resources," it said.
The Sukhdev report aims to create a framework in economic theory
to evaluate ecosystems that engages "end-users" and to provide a
policy toolkit for policy makers and administrators.
Sustainable development and better conservation of ecosystems and
biodiversity needed to be placed on a basis of sound economics, it
said.
The ninth conference of the parties to the Convention on
Biological Diversity (CBD) began on May 19 and is in its final,
political, phase culminating in the issuing of a conference document
on Friday.


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