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CBD & Revision




๐Ÿฆ‹ Chapter 02 ยท Topic 06 ยท CBD & Revision

CBD, Nagoya Protocol & Complete Revision

Convention on Biological Diversity, Nagoya & Cartagena Protocols, Biological Diversity Act 2002, Aichi Targets, Kunming-Montreal Framework โ€” complete Chapter 02 revision.

Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD)

The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) is a landmark international treaty that emerged from the Earth Summit (UNCED) held in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. It entered into force on 29 December 1993.

๐ŸŒฟ Three Objectives of CBD:
1. Conservation of biological diversity
2. Sustainable use of the components of biological diversity
3. Fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from the utilisation of genetic resources (Access and Benefit Sharing โ€” ABS)
  • Secretariat: Montreal, Canada
  • Parties: 196 countries (USA is a signatory but has not ratified)
  • India ratified: 1994
  • COP (Conference of Parties): Meets every 2 years; key decisions on biodiversity targets
  • CBD recognises sovereign rights of nations over their biological resources
  • Promotes Prior Informed Consent (PIC) before accessing genetic resources
โšก Exam Fact: CBD Secretariat is in Montreal, Canada โ€” not Geneva or Nairobi. The USA signed but never ratified CBD. India ratified in 1994.

Nagoya Protocol (2010)

Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit Sharing

  • Adopted: 2010 at COP-10, Nagoya, Japan; entered into force 2014
  • Full name: Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization
  • Purpose: Implements the ABS objective of CBD; prevents biopiracy
  • Key mechanism: Requires Prior Informed Consent (PIC) from the country of origin before accessing genetic resources
  • Mutually Agreed Terms (MAT): Benefits must be shared on mutually agreed terms
  • India ratified: 2012
  • Biopiracy examples prevented: Neem, turmeric, Basmati rice โ€” India fought against patents on these traditional resources
๐ŸŒฟ What is Biopiracy? Biopiracy refers to the unauthorised commercial use of biological resources or traditional knowledge from a country without fair compensation or acknowledgment. The Nagoya Protocol is the primary international instrument to combat biopiracy.

Cartagena Protocol (2000)

Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety

  • Adopted: 2000 in Montreal (named after Cartagena, Colombia where negotiations began); entered into force 2003
  • Purpose: Regulates the safe transfer, handling, and use of Living Modified Organisms (LMOs) / Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs)
  • Key principle: Precautionary Principle โ€” lack of scientific certainty should not prevent action to protect biodiversity
  • Advance Informed Agreement (AIA): Required before first transboundary movement of LMOs intended for release into environment
  • Biosafety Clearing-House (BCH): Information exchange mechanism under the protocol
  • India ratified: 2003

Biological Diversity Act, 2002

India enacted the Biological Diversity Act, 2002 to give effect to the CBD. It establishes a three-tier institutional structure:

InstitutionLevelLocationFunction
National Biodiversity Authority (NBA)NationalChennai, Tamil NaduRegulates access to biological resources; approves requests from foreigners/foreign companies; prevents biopiracy
State Biodiversity Boards (SBBs)StateState capitalsRegulate access by Indian citizens; advise state governments on biodiversity conservation
Biodiversity Management Committees (BMCs)LocalEvery local body (Panchayat/Municipality)Prepare People’s Biodiversity Registers (PBRs); conserve local biodiversity
โšก Key Facts:
โ€ข NBA headquarters: Chennai (not Delhi or Hyderabad)
โ€ข People’s Biodiversity Registers (PBRs): Prepared by BMCs; document local biodiversity and traditional knowledge
โ€ข Biological Diversity Act 2002 was amended in 2023 to ease access for Indian researchers and AYUSH practitioners

Aichi Biodiversity Targets (2010โ€“2020)

Adopted at COP-10 in Nagoya, Japan (2010), the Aichi Targets were a set of 20 targets under the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011โ€“2020:

  • Organised under 5 Strategic Goals (A to E)
  • Target 11: Protect at least 17% of terrestrial and 10% of marine areas by 2020
  • Target 12: Prevent extinction of known threatened species
  • Target 19: Improve knowledge and science base for biodiversity
  • Outcome: Most Aichi Targets were largely unmet by 2020 โ€” only 6 of 20 targets partially achieved
  • This failure led to the development of the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework

Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (2022)

Adopted at COP-15 in Montreal, Canada (December 2022), this framework replaces the Aichi Targets and sets the global biodiversity agenda for 2030 and 2050:

  • Vision: “Living in harmony with nature” by 2050
  • 30ร—30 Target (Target 3): Protect at least 30% of terrestrial, inland water, coastal, and marine areas by 2030
  • 30ร—30 for degraded ecosystems: Restore at least 30% of degraded ecosystems by 2030
  • Reduce harmful subsidies by at least USD 500 billion per year by 2030
  • Mobilise USD 200 billion per year for biodiversity by 2030
  • Includes provisions for Digital Sequence Information (DSI) benefit sharing
  • India is a signatory and committed to the 30ร—30 target
๐ŸŒฟ Protocols at a Glance:
โ€ข CBD (1992): Conservation + Sustainable use + ABS โ€” 3 objectives
โ€ข Cartagena (2000): GMOs/LMOs safety โ€” Precautionary Principle + AIA
โ€ข Nagoya (2010): ABS implementation โ€” PIC + MAT โ€” prevents biopiracy
โ€ข Aichi Targets (2010โ€“2020): 20 targets โ€” largely unmet
โ€ข Kunming-Montreal (2022): 30ร—30 target โ€” current framework

Complete Chapter 02 Revision Checklist

๐ŸŽฏ TOPIC 01 โ€” Types of Biodiversity
โœ… Biodiversity coined: Walter G. Rosen (1985); popularised by E.O. Wilson
โœ… Three types: Genetic, Species, Ecosystem
โœ… Alpha (within habitat) โ†’ Beta (between habitats) โ†’ Gamma (landscape total)
โœ… India: 17 megadiverse; 7โ€“8% world species; 2.4% land; 45,000 plants; 91,000 animals

๐ŸŽฏ TOPIC 02 โ€” Biodiversity Hotspots
โœ… Norman Myers (1988); criteria: โ‰ฅ1500 endemic plants + โ‰ฅ70% habitat lost
โœ… 36 hotspots globally; India has 4
โœ… Western Ghats & Sri Lanka: Lion-tailed macaque, Nilgiri tahr, Purple frog
โœ… Himalayas: Snow leopard, Red panda; Indo-Burma: Freshwater biodiversity
โœ… Sundaland: Nicobar Islands (NOT Andaman); Nicobar megapode

๐ŸŽฏ TOPIC 03 โ€” Endemic & Threatened Species
โœ… IUCN: EX โ†’ EW โ†’ CR โ†’ EN โ†’ VU โ†’ NT โ†’ LC โ†’ DD
โœ… CR: Great Indian Bustard, Gharial, Hangul, Pygmy Hog
โœ… EN: Bengal tiger, Asiatic lion (Gir), Indian elephant, Snow leopard
โœ… National Aquatic Animal = Ganges River Dolphin (EN)

๐ŸŽฏ TOPIC 04 โ€” Threats to Biodiversity
โœ… HIPPO: Habitat loss (most important) โ†’ Invasive โ†’ Pollution โ†’ Population โ†’ Overexploitation
โœ… Invasive: Lantana camara, Water hyacinth, Parthenium
โœ… Sixth Mass Extinction = Holocene; 1,000ร— background rate; ~1 million species threatened

๐ŸŽฏ TOPIC 05 โ€” Conservation
โœ… In-situ: NPs (106), WLSs (567), BRs (18; 12 UNESCO), Ramsar (75+), Sacred groves
โœ… Nilgiri = first Biosphere Reserve (1986)
โœ… Ex-situ: Zoos, botanical gardens, seed banks, gene banks, cryopreservation
โœ… NBPGR, New Delhi = National Gene Bank; 4+ lakh accessions

๐ŸŽฏ TOPIC 06 โ€” CBD & Protocols
โœ… CBD 1992: 3 objectives; Secretariat Montreal; India ratified 1994
โœ… Nagoya Protocol 2010: ABS; PIC; prevents biopiracy; India ratified 2012
โœ… Cartagena Protocol 2000: GMOs/LMOs; Precautionary Principle; AIA
โœ… Biological Diversity Act 2002: NBA (Chennai) โ†’ SBBs โ†’ BMCs (PBRs)
โœ… Aichi Targets 2010โ€“2020: 20 targets; largely unmet
โœ… Kunming-Montreal 2022: 30ร—30 target; protect 30% land + ocean by 2030