Paracas Declaration

The Environmental Ministers and Authorities gathered at the First Meeting of the Andean Community Council of Ministers of the Environment and Sustainable Development, in Paracas, Peru, on March 31 and April 1, 2005;

Stressing the importance of the environment for the Andean integration process, which has attributed priority to it as a strategic theme of the Andean Community, as ratified at the Tenth Meeting of the Andean Council of Foreign Ministers in March 2003;

Considering the convergence of the integration processes with a view to building the South American Community of Nations;

Recognizing the strategic position of the Andean countries, particularly as a result of their rich megadiversity and their Andean and Amazonian hydrographic potential;

Considering the need to reinforce the application of Decision 391 and to jointly and in coordination take part in the negotiation of an International Regime on Access to Genetic Resources and Benefit-Sharing;

Taking due note of the progress made toward implementing the Regional Biodiversity Strategy – RBS and of the Andean Plan to follow-up on the Johannesburg Summit on Sustainable Development 2003-2005, which includes the issues of Climatic Change, Water and Sanitation;

Considering the need to establish the criteria and processes for the design of the Andean Institute for Biodiversity provided for in Presidential Directive 33 of the Quito Act;

Considering the need to draw up the next Andean Environmental Agenda to cope with short- and medium-term challenges;

Recognizing the importance of reinforcing Andean coordination in negotiations in International Environmental and Trade Forums;

Recognizing that water is one of the driving issues on the Andean Environmental Agenda, and the need to move toward more integrated management that will help to reduce vulnerability stemming from climate change, natural disasters, pollution and destructive practices;

Recognizing the importance of integral water resource management for reducing poverty and fighting exclusion, of the sustainable management of water and sanitation services for complying with Millennium Targets, and of the need to improve mechanisms for methodically organizing experiences and for the use and exchange of information and know-how;

Emphasizing that the Andean subregion is one of the regions most vulnerable to the effects of climate change and reiterating directive 32 approved at the Fifteenth Meeting of the Andean Presidential Council in July 2004, which commissioned the formulating of the Andean strategy to confront and alleviate the negative effects of climate change in the Andean subregion;

AGREE TO:

The Andean Environmental Agenda

1. To entrust the Andean Committee of Environmental Authorities (CAAAM) with the review and evaluation of the Andean Plan to Follow-up on the Johannesburg Summit 2003-2005, and with the updating and prioritizing of the Andean Environmental Agenda, which should be submitted for adoption at the Second Meeting of the Andean Council of Ministers of the Environment and Sustainable Development, to be held in Venezuela in November 2005.

2. To request the Andean Community General Secretariat to prepare an evaluation report on the Andean Plan to Follow-up on the Johannesburg Summit 2003-2005, to be submitted to the countries for their consideration within a period of no more than one month.

3. To request the CAN General Secretariat to reinforce the institutional capacities of its environmental and sustainable development program so that the targets established in the Andean Environmental Agenda may be met. In principle, it will enjoy the technical assistance of an official of the United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP) in this task.

4. To strengthen the alliances being established by the CAN General Secretariat (CANGS) to guarantee execution of the Andean Environmental Agenda programs and projects, in coordination with the CAAAM, thereby safeguarding the integral nature of the Andean Integration System and its institutions.

5. To request the CANGS to study possibilities for appropriate mechanisms to finance the Andean Environmental Agenda, placing special importance on the financial mechanism of the Regional Biodiversity Strategy.

Andean Institute for Biodiversity

6. To instruct the CAAAM to prepare a proposed design of the Andean Institute for Biodiversity (AIB), based on the preliminary proposal put forward by the Government of Ecuador and the Andean Parliament. The proposal will be drawn up in coordination with the Andean Council for Science and Technology and will be based on criteria of technical, financial and administrative viability. The intention is that the Institute be an entity for the coordination and interlinkage of the installed scientific capacity in the subregion, the conservation and sustainable use of the biological diversity, and to support the implementation of the Regional Biodiversity Strategy and that the proposal be submitted to the Second Meeting of the Council of Ministers of the Environment and Sustainable Development for its consideration.

Genetic Resources

7. To entrust the Andean Committee on Genetic Resources with defining an Andean negotiation strategy on the International Regime on Access to Genetic Resources and Benefit-Sharing that would prioritize the following: a) inclusion of by-products, b) benefit-sharing, and c) recognition of Decision 391, among other things. This strategy will seek to coordinate actions with the other Latin American and Caribbean countries and with the Group of Like-Minded and Megadiverse Countries, insofar as possible.

8. To take steps toward the preparation of the sui generis Andean regime for the protection of traditional knowledge, in compliance with Decision 391 and Directive 36 of the Quito Presidential Act.

9. To give priority to the execution of the project to strengthen Andean capacities for the application of the Andean Regime on Genetic Resources that will be prepared in coordination with the Latin American Regional Office of UNEP-ORLAC, on the basis of priorities identified by Member Countries.

10. To reiterate the request to the CAF for economic and technical cooperation, as agreed at the June 2004 Meeting of Environmental Ministers and Authorities, in order to be able to guarantee the coordinated participation of the Andean countries in the negotiation of the International Regime. In addition, to request the CANGS to set up a coordination mechanism to facilitate the design of the Andean negotiation strategy.

11. To coordinate a joint position with the respective Agricultural and Foreign Relations authorities for the negotiation of the FAO International Treaty on Phytogenetic Resources and to strengthen the interlinkage of this Treaty with the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).

Climate change

12. To instruct the CANGS to take the necessary steps to rapidly secure the resources needed for the preparation of the Regional Strategy on Climate Change and, in this connection, to request UNEP and other cooperation institutions to provide the support required.

Integrated Water Resource Management

13. To entrust the CANGS, in coordination with PAHO’s CEPIS and the World Bank Water and Sanitation Program, with the organization of consultations in order to create mechanisms to improve access to information and knowledge, the exchange of experiences and collaboration among countries to help reach the Millennium water and sanitation targets, bearing in mind criteria of inclusion and sustainability.

14. These consultation mechanisms include an Andean workshop for the exchange of experiences on matters of integral basin management, the participation of organized communities and payment for environmental services, in such a way that common guidelines can be established.

Forests

15. To express the inadvisability of moving toward a legally binding international regime for the conservation and sustainable use of forests of all kinds that will be discussed in the Fifth United Nations Forum on Forests.

16. To entrust the Chair of the Council of Ministers of the Environment and Sustainable Development with holding consultations that will enable our countries to consolidate an Andean position on the subject, and to move toward the adoption of a common policy, starting at the meeting convened by the ACTO in Quito and continuing with this process of consultations during the sessions of the Fifth Forum.

Strategic alliances

17. They expressed their satisfaction at the increase in number of strategic alliances that contribute to the fulfillment of the objectives of the Andean Environmental Agenda and that recognize and consolidate present and future processes in the development of that agenda. They instruct the CANGS to report to the CAAAM any initiative or proposal involving strategies, projects and frameworks for action launched by other intergovernmental organizations, so that subregional interests may be safeguarded in the context of possible joint actions.

Acknowledgments

The Ministers welcomed the presence of the Executive Secretary of the Amazon Cooperation Treaty – ACTA, Mrs. Rosalía Arteaga, and expressed their interest in studying the proposed program “Equity and Inclusion in the Context of Sustained Development in the Andean Amazon Region;”

They also welcomed the presence of Mrs. Cristina Boelcke, Director of the UNEP Regional Cooperation Division, and of Mr. Ricardo Sánchez, Regional Director of UNDP/ROLAC, and expressed their appreciation for the financial support received to hold this meeting and to implement the Andean environmental agenda;

They went on to express their pleasure at the presence of the representatives of the PAHO’s CEPIS, Finnish Cooperation, the Institute for Research on the Peruvian Amazon, German Cooperation – GTZ, Spanish Cooperation – AECI, the Andean Parliament, the World Conservation Union – IUCN, and the United Nations.

In concluding, they expressed their special appreciation to the National Environmental Council, as Chair of the Council of Ministers of the Environment and Sustainable Development, for the cordial hospitality extended to the participants and for the organization of the event, and to the Andean Community General Secretariat for its efficient support, and in particular to the municipal authorities of the Districts of Pisco and Paracas, of the National Paracas Reserve and of the local community for their generous welcome during the event.

Paracas, April 1, 2005

 

Edwin Aguilera Antunez
Minister
Ministry of Sustainable Development
Bolivia

Carmen Arévalo Correa
Vice-Minister
Ministry of the Environment, Housing and Territorial Development
Colombia

Segundo Coello
Vice-Minister
Ministry of the Environment
Ecuador

Carlos Loret de Mola
Chair
National Environmental Council
Peru

Jacqueline Faria
Minister
Ministry of the Environment and of Natural Resources
Venezuela