Convention on Biological Diversity
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) is a multilateral environmental treaty adopted on 5 June 1992 at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, establishing three principal objectives: the conservation of biological diversity, the sustainable use of its components, and the fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from genetic resources.[1] The treaty entered into force on 29 December 1993 after ratification by 30 countries and now has 196 parties, making it one of the most widely ratified environmental agreements.[2] However, the United States signed but has not ratified it, primarily due to concerns that its provisions inadequately safeguard intellectual property rights of American corporations and could undermine national sovereignty over natural resources.[3] The CBD operates through the Conference of the Parties (COP), its supreme decision-making body, which has convened regularly to adopt protocols, strategic plans, and targets for implementation, including the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety (2000) addressing genetically modified organisms and the Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit-Sharing (2010).[4] Notable achievements include raising global awareness of biodiversity's value and fostering national biodiversity strategies in member states, yet empirical assessments reveal persistent failures, as biodiversity loss has accelerated rather than abated since the treaty's inception, with none of the 20 Aichi Biodiversity Targets from the 2010 strategic plan fully met by 2020.[5] Controversies surrounding the CBD center on its enforcement mechanisms, which lack binding penalties and rely on voluntary national reporting, leading to critiques of ineffectiveness amid ongoing habitat destruction, species extinctions, and overexploitation driven by economic pressures.[6] The 2022 Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework introduced ambitious goals like protecting 30% of land and oceans by 2030, but skepticism persists regarding achievability without stronger causal links to policy changes that prioritize conservation over development.[7] Recent COP meetings, such as COP16 in 2024-2025, have grappled with funding shortfalls and disputes over digital sequence information on genetic resources, underscoring tensions between scientific advancement and benefit-sharing mandates.[8]Origins and Objectives
Negotiation and Adoption
The negotiation process for the Convention on Biological Diversity originated from recommendations by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), whose Governing Council in 1987 called for exploring a global legal instrument to address biological diversity amid growing concerns over species loss and genetic resource exploitation.[9] In November 1988, UNEP established the Ad Hoc Working Group of Experts on Biological Diversity, which met in Geneva to evaluate the need for and scope of such a convention, producing reports that laid the groundwork for formal drafting.[9] This was followed in May 1989 by the Ad Hoc Working Group of Technical and Legal Experts, tasked with developing core elements including conservation, sustainable use, and equitable benefit-sharing from genetic resources.[10] In February 1991, the process advanced to intergovernmental level with the establishment of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) by UNEP, which conducted four negotiating sessions from February 1991 to May 1992, addressing contentious issues such as intellectual property rights, technology transfer, and financial mechanisms amid divergences between developed and developing nations.[10] The INC's work involved technical consultations, including a sub-working group on biotechnology established in 1990, and progressively refined draft texts through sessions in locations such as Madrid in June 1991 and Geneva in November 1991.[9] The seventh and final INC session convened from 11 to 19 May 1992 in Nairobi, Kenya, resolving remaining textual disputes to produce an agreed draft.[9] This led directly to the Nairobi Conference for the Adoption of the Agreed Text of the Convention on Biological Diversity on 20-22 May 1992, where the document was unanimously approved by participating governments.[9] The convention opened for signature on 5 June 1992 at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED, or Earth Summit) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, securing initial signatures from 150 governments during the event.[10] By the close of the signature period on 4 June 1993, 168 states had signed the treaty.[9]Core Objectives and Principles
The Convention on Biological Diversity, adopted on June 5, 1992, at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, establishes three interrelated objectives in Article 1: the conservation of biological diversity; the sustainable use of its components; and the fair and equitable sharing of the benefits arising from the utilization of genetic resources.[11] These objectives are to be pursued in accordance with the convention's other provisions, including mechanisms for access to genetic resources, transfer of relevant technologies, and funding, while respecting all rights over those resources and technologies.[11] Biological diversity is defined in Article 2 as the variability among living organisms from all sources, encompassing ecosystems, species, and genetic diversity within species, as well as ecological complexes of which they form part.[11] A foundational principle articulated in Article 3 affirms state sovereignty: "States have, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations and the principles of international law, the sovereign right to exploit their own resources pursuant to their own environmental policies, and the responsibility to ensure that activities within their jurisdiction or control do not cause damage to the environment of other States or of areas beyond the limits of national jurisdiction."[11] This principle underscores national authority over biological resources while imposing obligations to prevent transboundary harm, aligning with customary international environmental law.[12] Additional guiding elements include the precautionary approach, referenced in Article 14, which requires states to apply environmental impact assessments and, where threats of serious damage exist, not to delay measures for lack of full scientific certainty.[11] The convention integrates these objectives and principles into obligations for parties, such as developing national strategies, plans, or programs for conservation and sustainable use (Article 6), and promoting in-situ conservation through protected areas and habitat rehabilitation (Article 8).[11] Ex-situ conservation, research, and public education are also mandated to support the objectives (Articles 9 and 13).[11] Implementation emphasizes integration with sectors like agriculture, fisheries, and forestry, recognizing that sustainable use must not lead to biodiversity loss (Article 10).[11] These elements collectively aim to halt biodiversity decline while accommodating economic development, though empirical assessments of effectiveness, such as those tracking global species loss rates exceeding natural baselines, indicate ongoing challenges in realization.[13]Governance and Institutions
Conference of the Parties
The Conference of the Parties (COP) serves as the supreme governing and policy-making body of the Convention on Biological Diversity, comprising representatives from all Parties to the treaty.[1] Its primary functions include keeping the implementation of the Convention under continuous review, considering and adopting protocols in accordance with Article 28, establishing subsidiary bodies as required, reviewing relevant scientific, technical, and technological advice, and making recommendations to the Parties on measures for effective implementation.[1] The COP also assesses the Convention's effectiveness, adopts amendments to protocols or annexes, approves financial rules and budgets, and determines the financial participation of Parties.[1] Ordinary meetings of the COP occur at intervals of not more than two years, unless otherwise decided, with extraordinary meetings convened at the request of at least one-third of the Parties.[1] The first session was held from 28 November to 9 December 1994 in Nassau, Bahamas.[9] Subsequent meetings have been hosted in various locations, including Jakarta, Indonesia (COP 1, but actually first was Bahamas; wait, COP1 was Bahamas), with recent sessions such as COP 15 in Montreal, Canada (delayed parts in 2022), COP 16 in Cali, Colombia (October-November 2024, with resumption in Rome in February 2025), and the upcoming COP 17 scheduled for 19-30 October 2026 in Yerevan, Armenia.[14] [9] These gatherings facilitate negotiations on strategic plans, such as the adoption of the Global Biodiversity Framework at COP 15, and address implementation challenges through decisions that, while not legally binding, provide authoritative guidance to Parties on fulfilling Convention obligations.[15] [16] The COP operates through a bureau elected from among its members to coordinate activities between sessions and chairs meetings, ensuring decisions reflect consensus among the 196 Parties as of 2025.[17] It reviews national reports submitted by Parties on biodiversity conservation, sustainable use, and benefit-sharing, evaluating progress against targets and identifying gaps in compliance or capacity.[18] Decisions emerging from COP sessions, documented in official reports, have shaped subsidiary instruments like the Cartagena and Nagoya Protocols, emphasizing evidence-based adjustments to address drivers of biodiversity loss such as habitat degradation and invasive species. This structure underscores the COP's role in fostering multilateral cooperation without supranational enforcement, relying instead on voluntary national actions informed by periodic assessments.[1]Secretariat and Executive Secretary
The Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) serves as the administrative body responsible for facilitating the implementation of the treaty's objectives. Established following the CBD's entry into force on 29 December 1993, it performs core functions including organizing meetings of the Conference of the Parties (COP) and subsidiary bodies, preparing reports and documentation, assisting Parties with national implementation of programs, coordinating activities with other international organizations, and disseminating relevant information on biodiversity issues.[19][20] The Secretariat operates from its headquarters in downtown Montreal, Canada, and comprises over 100 staff members proficient in the United Nations' official languages.[21][22] It functions as the primary focal point for the CBD, supporting coordination among the 196 Parties while maintaining administrative independence under the oversight of the COP.[20] The Secretariat is headed by the Executive Secretary, who is appointed by the United Nations Secretary-General upon recommendation from the COP and serves as the chief administrative officer. This position, established to lead the Secretariat's operations, has seen eight incumbents since the CBD's inception, with the role evolving to emphasize strategic guidance on biodiversity conservation, sustainable use, and benefit-sharing amid growing global commitments like the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. The Executive Secretary represents the Secretariat in international forums, oversees budget and program execution funded primarily through voluntary contributions from Parties, and ensures alignment with UNEP-administered multilateral environmental agreements.[23][24] As of July 2024, Astrid Schomaker of Germany holds the position, marking her as the first Executive Secretary from that nation and the eighth overall. Appointed on 2 April 2024 by United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, Schomaker assumed duties on 1 July 2024, succeeding David Cooper. Prior to her appointment, she served as Director for Green Diplomacy and Multilateralism at the European Commission, with extensive experience in global sustainable development policy and an LLM in international legal cooperation; she joined the Commission in 1992.[25][23][24] Her tenure focuses on advancing post-2020 biodiversity targets amid challenges like habitat loss and climate interactions, drawing on empirical assessments of implementation gaps reported by Parties.[25]Subsidiary Bodies
The Convention on Biological Diversity maintains two primary subsidiary bodies to support the Conference of the Parties (COP) in technical and implementation matters: the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice (SBSTTA) and the Subsidiary Body on Implementation (SBI). These bodies provide specialized advice, assessments, and recommendations, operating on an open-ended, intergovernmental basis composed of representatives from Parties to the Convention.[26][27] SBSTTA, established under Article 25 of the Convention text adopted on May 22, 1992, serves as the primary scientific advisory mechanism. Its core functions include assessing the status of biological diversity, evaluating measures implemented by Parties for conservation and sustainable use, and identifying scientific, technical, and technological challenges in Convention fulfillment. The body convenes periodically to review emerging issues such as synthetic biology, biodiversity monitoring, and ecosystem restoration, delivering recommendations to the COP for decision-making. For instance, at its 26th meeting in October 2024, SBSTTA addressed progress on the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, including indicators for targets on invasive species and sustainable agriculture.[27][28] SBI was created by COP Decision XII/26 at the 12th meeting in Pyeongchang, Republic of Korea, on October 13, 2014, replacing the Ad Hoc Open-ended Working Group on Review of Implementation of the Convention to streamline oversight. It focuses on four key areas: reviewing implementation progress across Parties, identifying strategic actions to improve compliance, enhancing capacity-building and technology transfer, and addressing resource mobilization for biodiversity goals. SBI meetings, such as the fifth session held from October 14-18, 2024, in Nairobi, Kenya, examine national reporting, cooperation mechanisms, and barriers to achieving targets like those in the post-2020 global biodiversity framework.[29][29] In addition to these, the COP has established ad hoc subsidiary groups for specific mandates, such as the Working Group on Article 8(j), which promotes traditional knowledge and equitable benefit-sharing from indigenous and local communities, though it operates more episodically. These bodies collectively ensure evidence-based input into COP deliberations, with meetings typically held annually or biennially ahead of COP sessions to refine agendas and draft decisions.[26]Ratification and Global Participation
Parties, Signatories, and Non-Ratifiers
The Convention on Biological Diversity opened for signature on 5 June 1992 during the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and remained open until 4 June 1993.[4] It entered into force on 29 December 1993, ninety days after the thirtieth instrument of ratification was deposited by a signatory state.[4] As of 2025, the convention counts 196 parties, encompassing 195 sovereign states alongside the European Union as the sole regional economic integration organization party since 21 March 1994.[30][31] This achieves broad global adherence, incorporating all United Nations member states except the United States and Andorra, while extending to non-UN entities including Niue and the Cook Islands.[30][32] The United States signed the convention on 4 June 1993 but has declined to ratify, primarily due to provisions perceived as undermining intellectual property protections for U.S. biotechnology firms and imposing constraints on national sovereignty over genetic resources.[31][3] Among other signatories, the Holy See has not completed ratification. Andorra stands as a non-signatory without subsequent accession.[30]National Implementation Tools
Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) are obligated under Article 6 to develop national strategies, plans, or programmes for the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity, typically formalized as National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans (NBSAPs).[33] These plans serve as the primary mechanism for translating the Convention's objectives into domestic policy, integrating biodiversity considerations into sectoral planning such as agriculture, forestry, and urban development.[34] As of March 2025, over 190 parties have submitted revised NBSAPs aligned with the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework adopted in 2022, though implementation varies widely due to differences in institutional capacity and resource availability.[34] NBSAPs are supported by Secretariat-provided guidelines, including voluntary frameworks for their review and updating to ensure alignment with global targets like the 2030 Kunming-Montreal goals.[35] For instance, Decision XVI/1 from the 2024 Conference of the Parties urged parties without updated plans to prioritize revisions, emphasizing measurable targets, monitoring indicators, and mainstreaming biodiversity into national budgets.[34] Tools such as the Bioland software facilitate NBSAP development by enabling data integration and scenario modeling, particularly for countries with limited technical expertise.[34] National reports provide a structured tool for assessing implementation progress, with parties required to submit periodic updates via an online reporting tool using standardized indicators.[36] The seventh national reports, due by February 28, 2026, evaluate achievements against the Global Biodiversity Framework's targets, including headline indicators on species extinction risk and protected area coverage; as of 2024, 103 parties had submitted sixth reports from the prior cycle.[36] These reports inform the Conference of the Parties' evaluations but have been critiqued for inconsistent data quality and self-reporting biases, potentially overstating progress in some cases.[37] The Clearing-House Mechanism (CHM) operates at the national level through designated focal points to facilitate information exchange, capacity building, and technical cooperation.[38] Established under Article 18, national CHMs aggregate biodiversity data, best practices, and scientific resources, enabling parties to access global knowledge for local application; for example, platforms like the UK's CHM integrate domestic monitoring with international standards.[39] This mechanism supports NBSAP execution by promoting data sharing on genetic resources and biosafety, though adoption remains uneven, with stronger uptake in developed nations.[38] Additional implementation aids include financial mechanisms like the Global Environment Facility for funding NBSAP activities and subsidiary body recommendations on indicators for tracking national outcomes.[40]Protocols and Strategic Frameworks
Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety
The Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety is a supplementary protocol to the Convention on Biological Diversity, adopted on 29 January 2000 at the resumed extraordinary meeting of the Conference of the Parties in Montreal, Canada.[41] It entered into force on 11 September 2003, following the deposit of the fiftieth instrument of ratification or acceptance.[42] As of 2025, the protocol has 173 parties, comprising most CBD parties but excluding major biotechnology producers like the United States, which has not ratified the underlying convention.[43][44] The protocol's primary objective is to contribute to ensuring an adequate level of protection in the safe transfer, handling, and use of living modified organisms (LMOs)—defined as organisms containing novel combinations of genetic material via modern recombinant DNA techniques—that may adversely affect biological diversity or human health, particularly through transboundary movements.[45] It applies the precautionary principle, stipulating that lack of full scientific certainty about potential adverse effects shall not delay cost-effective measures to prevent environmental degradation.[46] Scope covers LMOs intended for direct use as food or feed, or for intentional release into the environment (e.g., field trials or commercial planting), but excludes pharmaceuticals for humans and contained-use LMOs not intended for environmental release.[45] Central provisions include the Advance Informed Agreement (AIA) procedure, mandating that exporting parties notify the competent authority of the importing party at least 90 days before the first transboundary shipment of an LMO for intentional environmental release, providing detailed risk assessment data for the importer's decision on import consent, refusal, or further information requests.[43] Risk assessments must be undertaken case-by-case, scientifically sound, transparent, and based on identified potential adverse effects, with importers bearing responsibility but exporters often conducting initial evaluations.[45] The Biosafety Clearing-House (BCH), an online mechanism, disseminates information on domestic LMO regulations, risk assessments, decisions, and capacity-building needs to facilitate compliance and informed decision-making.[43] Additional elements address capacity building for developing countries, public participation, information sharing, and compliance mechanisms, including a committee to review non-compliance cases.[43] Governance occurs through the Conference of the Parties to the CBD serving as the Meeting of the Parties (COP-MOP) to the protocol, which adopts decisions on implementation, such as the 2012 Strategic Plan aligning with the CBD's Aichi Targets (later updated post-2020).[47] A 2010 supplementary Nagoya-Kuala Lumpur Protocol on liability and redress, addressing damage from LMOs (e.g., response measures and restoration), entered into force on 5 March 2018 with 55 parties as of 2025, providing rules for causal links, operator responsibility, and channeling liability without strict or absolute standards.[48] Implementation emphasizes national biosafety frameworks, with parties required to enact laws on LMO handling, risk management, and emergency responses; however, uneven adoption persists, particularly in low-capacity nations.[49] Critics, including biotechnology experts, contend the protocol's precautionary focus imposes regulatory hurdles disproportionate to empirically demonstrated risks, as comprehensive reviews (e.g., by national academies) find no unique hazards from recombinant techniques versus conventional breeding, potentially impeding biodiversity-enhancing applications like drought-tolerant crops that reduce habitat conversion pressures.[50] It has also sparked trade disputes, with provisions allowing import bans based on precaution clashing with World Trade Organization non-discrimination rules, though no formal WTO challenges have invalidated protocol measures to date.[51] Empirical outcomes show limited transboundary movement notifications (fewer than 500 decisions in the BCH by 2020), suggesting either effective precaution or underutilization of beneficial LMOs in agriculture.[43]Nagoya Protocol on Access and Benefit-Sharing
The Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization is a supplementary agreement to the Convention on Biological Diversity, adopted on 29 October 2010 during the tenth Conference of the Parties in Nagoya, Japan.[52] Its primary objective is to establish a transparent legal framework for the fair and equitable sharing of benefits derived from the utilization of genetic resources, achieved through procedures for prior informed consent for access and mutually agreed terms on benefit-sharing.[53] The protocol also aims to contribute to the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity by supporting access under national laws, while respecting the sovereignty of provider countries over their resources.[54] Key provisions mandate that parties require prior informed consent before accessing genetic resources, the establishment of mutually agreed terms specifying benefit-sharing arrangements—such as monetary payments, technology transfer, or capacity-building—and the issuance of internationally recognized certificates of compliance as permits or equivalents.[53] Compliance mechanisms include national checkpoints to monitor utilization, information-sharing systems, and a compliance committee to address non-compliance cases, with procedures emphasizing capacity-building for developing countries rather than punitive measures.[55] The protocol applies to genetic material of actual or potential value, excluding human genetic resources, and addresses derivatives and traditional knowledge associated with genetic resources held by indigenous and local communities.[54] The protocol entered into force on 12 October 2014, ninety days after the deposit of the fiftieth instrument of ratification or accession.[54] As of October 2024, it has 142 parties, comprising 141 United Nations member states and the European Union, though major users of genetic resources like the United States have not ratified it.[56] Parties are required to enact domestic legislative, administrative, or policy measures for implementation, including designation of national focal points and competent authorities.[57] Implementation has faced challenges, including the need to balance benefit-sharing with legal certainty to avoid hindering research and innovation, as overly restrictive access rules can constrain the exchange of genetic resources for non-commercial scientific purposes.[58] Empirical assessments indicate limited realization of monetary benefits, with benefit-sharing mechanisms often relying on non-monetary forms like training and joint research, though data on overall outcomes remains sparse due to inconsistent reporting.[59] Critics argue the protocol's focus on bilateral agreements may not intrinsically promote biodiversity conservation and could impose bureaucratic burdens that reduce access for academic research without proportionally increasing benefits to providers.[60] Ongoing reviews by the protocol's Conference of the Parties serving as the Meeting of the Parties emphasize capacity-building and targeted surveys to address these gaps.[61]Global Strategies and Biodiversity Plans
The Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011–2020, including the Aichi Biodiversity Targets, was adopted by the tenth Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the Convention on Biological Diversity on 29 October 2010 in Nagoya, Japan.[62] This plan outlined a vision of "living in harmony with nature" where biodiversity is valued, conserved, restored, and wisely used, maintaining ecosystem services, sustaining human well-being, and delivering benefits equitably.[63] It comprised five strategic goals: addressing underlying causes of biodiversity loss (A); reducing direct pressures on biodiversity and promoting sustainable use (B); improving the status of biodiversity by safeguarding ecosystems, species, and genetic diversity (C); enhancing implementation tools and processes (D); and strengthening capacity-building for biodiversity management (E).[63] Under these goals, 20 specific Aichi Targets were set for achievement by 2020, including halving the rate of habitat loss (Target 5), conserving at least 17% of terrestrial and inland water areas and 10% of coastal and marine areas (Target 11), and mobilizing US$30 billion annually in new and additional international financial resources for biodiversity by 2015 (Target 20).[63] The plan served as a flexible framework for action by Convention parties, other governments, and stakeholders, integrating biodiversity considerations into broader United Nations system efforts and national development plans.[62] Parties were required to update or develop National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans (NBSAPs) to align with the Aichi Targets, with progress monitored through national reports and global assessments.[62] Succeeding the 2011–2020 plan, the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework was adopted at COP15 on 19 December 2022 in Montreal, Canada, following negotiations initiated in Kunming, China.[64] This post-2020 framework establishes a 2050 vision of a world living in harmony with nature, where biodiversity is conserved, sustainably used, and restored to underpin human well-being.[64] It includes four 2050 goals: maintaining ecosystem integrity and function (Goal A); sustainable use and benefit-sharing without compromising future options (Goal B); fair and equitable sharing of benefits from genetic resources and digital sequence information (Goal C); and adequate means of implementation, including financial resources, capacity-building, and scientific cooperation (Goal D).[64] The framework's 23 targets for 2030 emphasize urgent action across four areas: reducing biodiversity threats (Targets 1–8, such as reducing nutrient pollution by half and eliminating subsidies harmful to biodiversity exceeding US$500 billion annually); meeting people's needs through sustainable use and restoration (Targets 9–13, including restoring 30% of degraded ecosystems); investing in biodiversity management (Targets 14–21, targeting at least US$200 billion annually in international finance from all sources); and enhancing implementation tools like monitoring and transparency (Targets 22–23).[65] Parties commit to aligning NBSAPs with these targets, with monitoring supported by indicators and enhanced transparency mechanisms.[64] The framework also integrates whole-of-government and whole-of-society approaches, emphasizing mainstreaming biodiversity into sectoral policies.[64]Addressed Challenges and Thematic Programs
Conservation and Sustainable Use
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) mandates Parties to establish strategies, plans, or programs for the conservation of biological diversity, including in-situ conservation measures such as protected areas, habitat restoration, and regulation of activities harmful to biodiversity, as specified in Article 8.[11] Ex-situ conservation, detailed in Article 9, involves programs like gene banks, botanical gardens, and captive breeding to support recovery of threatened species and research.[11] Sustainable use is addressed in Article 10, requiring integration of biodiversity considerations into planning and policies, promotion of sustainable harvesting, and protection of traditional knowledge for equitable benefit-sharing.[11] To operationalize these provisions, the Conference of the Parties (COP) adopted the ecosystem approach in 2000 as a strategy for integrated management of land, water, and living resources that promotes conservation and sustainable use simultaneously. This approach underpins seven thematic programs of work established by the COP, targeting major biomes: marine and coastal biodiversity, inland waters, forest biodiversity, dry and sub-humid lands, mountain biodiversity, agricultural biodiversity, and island biodiversity.[66] For instance, the forest biodiversity program, adopted in 2002, includes goals for maintaining forest cover, restoring degraded areas, and ensuring sustainable wood production, with specific targets like halting deforestation by 2015 (later extended). Global frameworks have set quantitative benchmarks for progress. The 2010 Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020, with its 20 Aichi Biodiversity Targets, aimed to address conservation and sustainable use; Target 5 sought reduced habitat loss rates, while Target 7 focused on sustainable agriculture, aquaculture, and forestry.[67] Assessments indicate partial progress: terrestrial protected areas expanded to cover approximately 15% of global land by 2020, up from 10% in 1990, but only partial achievement of sustainable use elements like Target 4 on halting species decline.[67] Overall, none of the Aichi Targets were fully met by 2020, with ongoing biodiversity loss evidenced by accelerating species extinction rates exceeding natural baselines.[68] The post-2020 Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, adopted in December 2022, builds on these efforts with four 2050 goals and 23 targets for 2030, emphasizing sustainable use in Goal B (restoration of degraded areas and sustainable management to enhance biodiversity) and targets such as Target 5 (sustainable and integrated management of agriculture, aquaculture, fisheries, and forestry to reduce pressures) and Target 9 (sustainable management of wild species to prevent overexploitation).[64] Target 3 commits to conserving at least 30% of terrestrial, inland water, and coastal/marine areas through effectively managed protected areas and other measures.[65] Implementation relies on national biodiversity strategies, with monitoring via indicators tracking metrics like the Living Planet Index, which reported a 69% average decline in monitored vertebrate populations from 1970 to 2018 despite CBD efforts.[64] Empirical data from global assessments highlight persistent challenges, including habitat conversion for agriculture driving 75% of terrestrial biodiversity loss.[69]Biosafety, Biotechnology, and Genetic Resources
The Convention on Biological Diversity addresses biosafety primarily through the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, adopted on January 29, 2000, and entered into force on September 11, 2003, which supplements the parent convention by establishing procedures for the safe handling, transport, and use of living modified organisms (LMOs) resulting from modern biotechnology that may adversely affect biological diversity or human health.[43][49] The protocol mandates an advance informed agreement (AIA) procedure for first-time transboundary movements of LMOs intended for intentional release into the environment, requiring exporters to notify importing parties and provide risk assessments demonstrating no significant adverse effects.[43][70] Risk assessment under the protocol must be based on scientific principles, including case-by-case evaluations of potential harms to conservation and sustainable use, with decisions made by importing parties not subject to trade agreements that override biodiversity protections.[49] As of 2023, the protocol has 173 parties, facilitating information exchange via the Biosafety Clearing-House (BCH).[43] Biotechnology provisions in the CBD itself, particularly Article 8(g), obligate parties to "establish or maintain means to regulate, manage or control the risks associated with the use of living modified organisms resulting from biotechnology which are likely to have adverse impact on the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity."[11] Article 16 further promotes the development and safer use of biotechnologies, emphasizing technology transfer to developing countries while subjecting applications to appropriate procedures for minimizing risks, in alignment with the precautionary approach outlined in Article 15(1).[11] These measures aim to balance innovation—such as genetic engineering for crop improvement—with empirical risk mitigation, though implementation varies by national regulatory frameworks informed by the protocol's guidelines.[11] Genetic resources, defined in CBD Article 2 as "genetic material of actual or potential value," are governed by access and benefit-sharing (ABS) principles in Articles 15, 16, and 19, requiring prior informed consent (PIC) for access by foreign entities and mutually agreed terms for fair benefit-sharing arising from commercial or other utilization, including research results and biotechnological applications.[11] The Nagoya Protocol, adopted on October 29, 2010, and entered into force on October 12, 2014, operationalizes these by mandating PIC, mutually agreed terms, and compliance measures, including checkpoints for verifying ABS obligations in sectors like pharmaceuticals and cosmetics.[71] The protocol's ABS Clearing-House supports transparency through issuance of internationally recognized certificates of compliance, with 140 parties as of 2023 emphasizing equitable sharing of monetary (e.g., royalties) and non-monetary benefits (e.g., technology transfer) from genetic resource utilization.[72][73] Empirical tracking under the protocol includes model legislative, administrative, or policy approaches adopted by parties to prevent biopiracy while enabling research, though enforcement relies on national laws and lacks direct supranational penalties.[72]Marine, Coastal, and Ecosystem-Specific Initiatives
The Jakarta Mandate on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine and Coastal Biological Diversity was adopted by the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the Convention on Biological Diversity at its second meeting in Jakarta, Indonesia, on November 6–17, 1995.[74] This mandate recognized the oceans' coverage of over 70% of Earth's surface and their role in hosting ancient and diverse life forms, emphasizing integrated approaches to address threats such as habitat loss, overexploitation, pollution, and invasive species.[75] It called for a global consensus on prioritizing marine and coastal biodiversity, promoting integrated marine and coastal area management (IMCAM), and enhancing cooperation among states and sectors to achieve sustainable use.[76] Building on the Jakarta Mandate, the Programme of Work on Marine and Coastal Biological Diversity was established at COP IV in 1998 and revised at COP VII in 2004.[77] The programme outlines specific elements, including the application of IMCAM to mitigate human impacts, establishment of ecologically representative networks of marine and coastal protected areas consistent with international law, sustainable management of fisheries and mariculture to prevent overexploitation, control of alien species introductions, and research on deep-sea biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction. It urges parties to integrate these actions into national biodiversity strategies, with periodic in-depth reviews of implementation progress, such as those conducted by the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice.[78] Ecosystem-specific initiatives under the programme target vulnerable habitats. For coral reefs, which support approximately 25% of marine species despite covering less than 1% of the ocean floor, the CBD has prioritized actions aligned with Aichi Biodiversity Target 10, including resilience-building measures against bleaching and acidification through reduced local stressors like pollution and destructive fishing.[79] These efforts involve global partnerships, such as the International Coral Reef Initiative, to map threats and restore ecosystems, with decisions urging parties to minimize impacts from coastal development and tourism.[80] Coastal ecosystems like mangroves and seagrasses receive attention for their roles in carbon sequestration and shoreline protection; initiatives promote restoration to counter deforestation rates exceeding 35% loss since 1980, integrating them into protected area networks and sustainable use plans.[81] The Sustainable Ocean Initiative, launched in 2015 ahead of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, serves as a platform for multi-stakeholder partnerships to enhance capacity in marine biodiversity conservation, focusing on holistic management of areas beyond national jurisdiction and high-seas governance.[82] Recent COP decisions, such as those from COP 15 in 2022, reinforce these by urging strengthened ocean accounting, economic valuation of ecosystem services, and alignment with the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework's Target 3, aiming for 30% effective conservation of marine areas by 2030.[83] Implementation emphasizes collaboration with regional bodies and avoids prescriptive measures that conflict with national sovereignty over exclusive economic zones.[84]Empirical Effectiveness and Outcomes
Measured Achievements
The Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) has achieved near-universal participation, with 196 Parties as of 2025, encompassing 168 signatories and covering nearly all United Nations member states except for a few non-parties such as the United States.[44] This broad adherence has facilitated the development of supplementary protocols, including the Cartagena Protocol on Biosafety, ratified by 173 Parties since entering into force on September 11, 2003, which establishes procedures for the safe handling of living modified organisms.[41] Similarly, the Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization, effective from October 12, 2014, has garnered 142 ratifications as of October 2024, promoting regulatory frameworks for genetic resource utilization in over 140 jurisdictions.[56] At the national level, the CBD has driven the formulation and updating of National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans (NBSAPs) by 170 countries, representing approximately 85% of Parties by mid-2020, with the vast majority incorporating targets aligned with global objectives such as awareness-raising and habitat conservation.[85] These plans have supported quantitative progress in select areas, including the partial achievement of six Aichi Biodiversity Targets (2011–2020), notably Target 11, which aimed for 17% terrestrial and 10% coastal/marine protection; by 2020, protected area coverage reached about 15% of terrestrial and inland water areas (up from 10% in 2000) and 7–7.7% of marine areas (up from 3% in 2000), with key biodiversity areas covered at 43%.[85] Habitat loss metrics reflect modest gains attributable to CBD implementation, with global deforestation rates declining by approximately 33% from the prior decade to 10 million hectares per year between 2015 and 2020, linked to enhanced forest management and restoration efforts outlined in NBSAPs and Targets 5 and 15.[85] Additionally, 91 countries had implemented System of Environmental-Economic Accounting (SEEA) frameworks by 2020 to integrate biodiversity values into national planning, advancing Target 2.[85] These outcomes, while falling short of halting overall biodiversity decline, demonstrate measurable expansions in policy tools, spatial protections, and data integration fostered by the Convention's framework.[85]| Aichi Target | Partial Achievement Highlights |
|---|---|
| 5 (Habitat Loss) | Deforestation reduction; 79% of NBSAPs include related targets.[85] |
| 9 (Invasive Species) | Control measures in place; 84% of NBSAPs address invasives.[85] |
| 11 (Protected Areas) | Coverage expansions as noted above; 90% of NBSAPs include targets.[85] |
| 16 (Nagoya Protocol) | Operationalization in 57+ Parties; benefit-sharing measures published.[85] |
| 17 (NBSAPs) | Updated plans in majority of Parties.[85] |
| 20 (Funding) | Increased resource mobilization, though insufficient for full targets.[85] |