Press release

New agreement reached in Nagoya: statement from Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman

Caroline Spelman today welcomed the new agreement reached in Nagoya for setting targets to protect the natural environment.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government

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Caroline Spelman said:

鈥溁使谔逵齛ppse have been long and hard negotiations, but we have successfully achieved a new global plan to help protect our natural environment. We have also agreed an historic protocol which has been 18 years in the making, establishing a regime where developing countries will allow access to their genetic and natural resources in return for a share of the benefits for their use.

鈥溁使谔逵齛pp new agreement states we will take effective and urgent action to halt the loss of habitats and species in order to ensure that by 2020 our natural environment is resilient and can continue to provide the essential services that we would otherwise take for granted. This will secure the planet鈥檚 variety of life, our well being and help eradicate poverty.

鈥淲e have also secured an agreement to link climate change, global poverty and biodiversity together in protecting the world鈥檚 forests, which is essential if we are to achieve our aims in these areas. This was a key objective for the UK and this week I announced 拢100 million specifically to fund biodiversity projects in forest regions.

鈥淚 and my colleagues from other EU member states have learnt the tough lessons from other negotiations and worked tirelessly at this conference to find common ground amongst nations so that this agreement can be reached.

鈥淲e will now take this binding framework forward and put the key elements into effect in the Natural Environment White Paper to be published in spring 2011.鈥�

Further information

  • 聽(Convention on Biological Diversity: tenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties)

Updates to this page

Published 29 October 2010