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L’UE ne parvenant pas à atteindre son objectif ambitieux de stopper la perte de biodiversité en Europe avant 2010, l’agence environnementale européenne appelle à l’intégration de mesures de protection dans les politiques agricole, forestière et de la pêche, ainsi qu’à la tarification des biens et services en fonction de leur véritable impact sur l’environnement.
"External pressures on biodiversity are not uniform or held in place by geographical designations, and we must not focus all our efforts on preserving islands of biodiversity while losing nature everywhere else," Jacqueline McGlade, executive director of the European Environment Agency (EEA), told a conference
on biodiversity protection on 27 April.
The current price of goods and services "does not reflect their impact on the ecosystems that sustain them," according to the agency. The EEA believes "better ecosystem accounting, which indicates the real value of the natural capital that we deplete through our economic activity," is necessary. The agency is urging the EU to integrate biodiversity and ecosystems into key sectors like agriculture, forestry and fisheries.
At the conference, European Commission President José Manuel Barroso confirmed the results of last year's progress report
on the implementation of the EU's Biodiversity Action Plan
, which revealed that the bloc is not even close to achieving its target of halting biodiversity loss in the EU by 2010 (EurActiv 17/12/08).
According to the report, 50% of all species and up to 80% of habitat types in need of protection in Europe have "unfavourable conservation" status, which indicates species decline. The same goes for over 40% of European bird species.
"We are running up debts against the future of the planet that we will never be able to repay," said Barroso, referring to the destruction of nature as "the ultimate toxic asset".
Barroso presented the EU executive's new "seven-point plan for nature protection," which highlights the need to better communicate why biodiversity and healthy ecosystems matter, and how they underpin economic, social and cultural well-being.
The Commission president also urged member states to implement existing EU legislation, citing the Birds and Habitats Directives as examples. The EU must also "agree on new policies to address deforestation and to reduce the EU's ecological footprint," he added.
BirdLife International welcomed "the strong calls made by key decision-makers" to put an end to the loss of animal and plant species, but lamented the apparent "huge gap between aspirations and real action". It also deplored the fact that the conference's message remained "vague", and was not ambitious enough regarding the policy reform required.
The 'European Habitats Forum' - comprising 17 conservation NGOs - presented
the conference with its recommendation for the EU's 'post-2010' biodiversity policy. The forum is calling for a complete reform of all EU sectoral policies which have adverse effects on the environment, to support the resilience of ecosystems. It is also urging the bloc to adopt new legislation on soil conservation and reducing invasive alien species.