Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Stakeholder Engagement – practices and regulation implications Mikhail Babenko WWF Global Arctic Programme.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Stakeholder Engagement – practices and regulation implications Mikhail Babenko WWF Global Arctic Programme."— Presentation transcript:

1 Stakeholder Engagement – practices and regulation implications Mikhail Babenko WWF Global Arctic Programme

2 WWF Roles One of the Stakeholders Building on other stakeholders knowledge Advocating for Stakeholder engagement

3 Challenges in the Arctic

4

5

6 Prirazlomnoye field

7 West Kamchatka Shelf

8 Gas in water According to our review dissolubility of gas in the water column depends on many factors and depth of water column is one of them

9 Key principles Transparency Engagement Ecosystem based management Management of marine areas use Precautionary approach Arctic shielded from the worst effects of rapid change through effective international stewardship promoting healthy living systems to the benefit of local peoples and all humanity.

10 Who will be the responders?

11 What is available on key principles? Precautionary principle \ approach Principle 15 of the Rio Declaration Agreement for the Implementation of the Provisions of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 10 December 1982 relating to the Conservation and Management of Straddling Fish Stocks and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks arts. 5(c), 6 Convention on Biological Diversity, pmbl. 6 ‐ 9. (indirect reference to the principle) Convention on the IMO, art 38 (c)

12 What is available on key principles? Protection of ecologically, socially, and culturally important areas UNCLOS recognizes a broad obligation to preserve the environment, even beyond national areas of responsibility UNCLOS, art. 192. The Convention on Biological Diversity requires states, as far as possible and as appropriate, to "establish a system of protected areas or areas where special measures need to be taken to conserve biological diversity"

13 What is available on key principles? Public access to information and participation The OSPAR Convention, to which Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden are Parties, broadly defines public access requirements The Helsinki Convention, to which Denmark, Finland, Russia, and Sweden are Parties, describes specific types of information to which the public has access: permits, the results of water sampling, water-quality objectives, and the results of water-quality compliance monitoring.

14 What is available on key principles? Mindful further that indigenous peoples, local communities, local and regional governments, and individual Arctic residents can provide valuable resources and knowledge regarding the Arctic marine environment in support of oil pollution preparedness and response, Recognizing also the expertise and roles of various stakeholders relating to oil pollution preparedness and response Each Party, subject to its national law and international law, should endeavor to make information provided to other Parties under paragraph 1 of this Article publicly available (Art 12, 2 )

15

16

17 Thank you! www.panda.org


Download ppt "Stakeholder Engagement – practices and regulation implications Mikhail Babenko WWF Global Arctic Programme."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google