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Introduction to the EEA its work on biodiversity indicators and links to policy

Introduction to the EEA its work on biodiversity indicators and links to policy. Sophie Condé, MNHN, European Topic Centre on Biological Diversity Ben Delbaere ECNC, on behalf of European Topic Centre on Biological Diversity. Table of Contents. Institutional context

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Introduction to the EEA its work on biodiversity indicators and links to policy

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  1. Introduction to the EEAits work on biodiversity indicators andlinks to policy Sophie Condé, MNHN, European Topic Centre on Biological Diversity Ben DelbaereECNC, on behalf of European Topic Centre on Biological Diversity

  2. Table of Contents • Institutional context • Common language on indicators • EEA activities on indicators • Links to policy needs

  3. Table of Contents 1. Institutional context

  4. What is EEA? The European Environment Agency (EEA) is an agency of the European Union. • provide sound, independent information on the environment. • major information source for those involved in developing, adopting, implementing and evaluating environmental policy, and also the general public • European Topic Centre on Biological Diversity: 9 partners including MNHN and ECNC

  5. Thank you for your attention What is EIONET? • European Environment Information and Observation Network

  6. EIONET West Balkans activities Extension of the main EEA topic areas to the West Balkan countries funded by Instrument for Pre-Accession (IPA) CSI Core Set of Indicators SOE State and outlook reporting Sustainable consumption, productionAnd Waste Biodiversity Inland, Coastal & Marine waters Air emissions and air quality Spatial Information and Analysis

  7. Table of Contents 2. Common language on indicators

  8. What is an indicator? (1) • Several definitions according to the context, the needs and the goals • Biological indicator/evaluative indicator: presence of a species that reacts sensitively to changes in environmental conditions (Heink et al, 2010) plants and soil • Information based on measured data used to represent a particular attribute, characteristic, or property of a system(MA, 2005a) • oxygen in freshwater • A variable that describes the state of a system(Walz, 2000)

  9. What is an indicator? (2) • Several definitions according to the context, the needs and the goals • An indicator in ecology and environmental planning is a component or a measure of environmentally relevant phenomena used to depict or evaluate environmental conditions or changes or to set/assessenvironmental goals. Environmentally relevant phenomena are pressures, states, and responses. OECD (2003) • Scientific indicator versus Policy Indicator

  10. What is needed for a policy indicator? • Four basic functions: • Simplification • Quantification • Standardisationan indicator ‘d summarize complex, (disparate) sets of dataan indicator ‘d be based on comparable scientific observations or statistical measuresan indicator ‘d related on time-series data • Communication: an indicator ‘d provide a clear message

  11. Criteria for selection of biodiversity indicators • Policy relevant and meaningful • Biodiversity relevant • Target relevant • Well founded methodology: clear, well defined, simple • Acceptance by stakeholders • Routinely collected data: regular collected, clearly defined and scientifically acceptable data • Cause-effect relationship: in order to link pressures, state and responses • Good spatial coverage according to the studied area • Temporal trend • Sensitivity towards change • Representative of the DPSIR model • Small in number • Aggregation & flexibility: ‘d be facilitated on a range of scales

  12. Table of Contents 3. EEA activities on indicators

  13. EEA Core Set of Indicators Started in 2000’s and aimed to • provide a manageable and stable basis for indicator reporting by the EEA on the web and in its indicators-based reports • prioritise improvements in the quality and geographical coverage of data flows, especially priority data flows of the European environment information and observation network (Eionet) • streamline EEA/Eionet contributions to other European and global indicator initiatives, e.g. structural indicators and sustainable development indicators. In 2004, the EEA Management Board approved the Core Set of Indicators, a set of 37 environmental indicators with 3 biodiversity indicators. In 2005, the Indicator Management System tool was launched to manage and put online a first version of the CSI.

  14. EEA Core Set of Indicators: on-going revision

  15. SEBI - Streamlining European Biodiversity Indicators • Initiated in 2005 to select a set of indicators to monitor progress towards halting biodiversity loss by 2010 in Europe • Partnership between: EEA & ETC/BD, EC, UNEP-WCMC, PEBLDS and Czech Republic • SEBI built on the conceptual framework provided by the CBD, and worked with a set of headline indicators within the CBD focal areas • Involvement of nearly 150 experts allowed to develop a set of 26 indicators

  16. 26 specific indicators

  17. Representation of countries in the SEBI set

  18. SEBI indicators publicly available online on EEA IMS (Indicator Management System)

  19. 2010 Assessments based onSEBI indicator set

  20. SEBI support to EU policy Input to monitor progress of the 6th Environmental Action Programme Input into the 2010 assessment of Biodiversity Action Plan Supported heavily the EU 2010 Baseline …

  21. Assessment of role of SEBI in developing the national biodiversity indicator sets • Questionnaire sent in May 2011 • 22 countries answered • Questionnaire on the SEBI process, not on particular issues related to e.g. the indicator methodology

  22. Some results

  23. SEBI 2012 report • 2 main purposes: • summarise and document the achievements of the SEBI process related to measuring progress towards the 2010 target • show strengths of both the process and the indicator set to underpin measurement of the 2020 targets as well as the challengesof making the proposed indicators a high quality, operational set.

  24. Key strengths of SEBI • mobilising existing data and expertise • developing a stakeholder process to identify policy-relevant biodiversity indicators • links to and anchoring in national, EU, pan‑European and global processes • streamlining the process of biodiversity indicator development and reporting at several levels– reducing the burden of reporting requirements • links to expert networks in Europe.

  25. 4. Links to policy needs

  26. CBD Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020 • At global level: CBD Strategic Plan for Biodiversity • 20 Aichi Biodiversity Targets under 5 Strategic Goals • 5thnational reports, due by 31 March 2014, should focus on the implementation of the 2011-2020 Strategic Plan and progressachievedtowards the Aichi BiodiversityTargets.

  27. 2020 Pan European Strategy • A new 2020 Pan European Strategy adopted in 2012

  28. EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2020 HEADLINE TARGET: halting the loss of biodiversity and the degradation of ecosystem services in the EU by 2020, and restoring them in so far as feasible, while stepping up the EU contribution to averting global biodiversity loss; Council Conclusions March 2010 Targets • Conserving and restoring nature • Maintaining and enhancing ecosystems and their services • Ensuring the sustainability of agriculture and forestry • Ensuring the sustainability of fisheries • Combating invasive alien species • Addressing the global biodiversity crisis

  29. EU Biodiversity Strategy for 2020 • ‘The Commission will work with Member States and the European Environment Agency to develop by 2012 an integrated(coherent) framework for monitoring, assessing and reporting on progress in implementing the strategy.’ • ‘The EU 2010 biodiversity baseline and the updated EU biodiversity indicators will be key components of this framework…..’

  30. SEBI for 2020 targets • Mapping SEBI indicators to new global and EU targets: • an exhaustive analysis of the alignment of the current SEBI indicator set with the 2020 biodiversity targets, complemented by indicators from other relevant sets • Further development of SEBI set for monitoring of implementation of the strategy to 2020 • guided also by EEA indicator review

  31. Measurement of progress towards 2020 targets • All SEBI indicators can be used to measure progress against the 6 new EU targets and the 20 Aichi targets • Gaps have also been identified – which will need to be further considered by thematic experts

  32. EEA work on indicators continues • EEA indicator review and updating • Update of the EU 2010 baseline report • Support to the EU 5th CBD report mid 2014 • 2015 SOER report

  33. More information, or comments? Thank you! SEBI: Katarzyna.Biala@eea.europa.eu Sophie.conde@mnhn.fr Project SEBI in West Balkan: torremarin@ecnc.org

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