
The Ocean & Climate Platform therefore publishes a Policy Brief exploring options to build synergies between the CBD and the UNFCCC towards a more integrated ocean-climate-biodiversity governance. Diving into these Conventions, this brief identifies four possible entry points across science, policy, action and finance to start swimming the talk and boost cooperation to address the greatest challenges of our time.
- Science: Scientists must continue to support informed decision-making, prompting policymakers to further consider ocean, climate and biodiversity interactions. Intergovernmental science-policy bodies (i.e., IPCC and IPBES) have a key role to play by increasing their cooperation. Similarly, further collaboration between the Conventions’ Subsidiary bodies (i.e., SBSTA and SBSTTA) is another way forward to boost synergies between the CBD and UNFCCC.
- Policy: Policymakers must work towards increasing political coherence between ocean, climate and biodiversity strategies. Coordinating national commitments (i.e., NDCs and NBSAPs) is an opportunity to align ambition towards both climate-smart and biodiversity-neutral or, ideally, biodiversity-positive targets. At the global level, opportunities for further communication and cooperation lie within the Governing bodies (i.e., COPs) and their related Presidencies, as well as within the Secretariats of the Conventions.
- Action: Non-State actors are agents of change and drivers for increased ambition. Building bridges among climate and biodiversity communities of non-state actors, including among the two action agendas (i.e., Global Climate Action Agenda and Action Agenda for People and Nature) could be a game-changer in the way non-party stakeholders mobilise and influence decision-makers to tackle the climate and biodiversity crises as one and the same
- Finance: Strengthening the ocean-climate-biodiversity nexus can be further achieved by better reflecting it in investments or financing strategies, and by increasing collaboration across the financial mechanisms and institutions. The GCF and GEF, which already operate with both Conventions, could strive to build bridges between their respective workstreams, mainstreaming climate issues in biodiversity projects and vice versa.
This policy Brief was co-authored by Loreley Picourt and Marine Lecerf from the Ocean & Climate Platform, with the contributions of Sylvie Goyet, Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation, Raphaël Cuvelier and Françoise Gaill, Ocean & Climate Platform, as well as Rémi Parmentier, Because the Ocean initiative.
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