Ama Kudom-Agyemang

April 26, 2019

As countries continue to take action to implement the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and members to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), await the coming of year 2020 to agree to a new global biodiversity framework, it has become clear that data has a crucial role to play.

Because biodiversity is key to the attainment of the goals of these two international agendas, they will require free, open and productive flow of spatial data that can help to track, plan and deliver on their goals for sustainable development. Fortunately, the world has entered into another phase of industrial revolution, propelled by accelerating technological changes with handy tools that facilitate the compilation, production and use of spatial data.

However, African countries are said to be losing big time on the global share of investments in conservation businesses and green economy in particular, because they lack primary data to quantify baseline biodiversity patterns or evaluate local ecosystem services. 

Private Capital Committed to Habitat Conservation by Geography, Asset Class, Instrument Type, and Finance Stage. Source: State of Private Investment in Conservation 2016 https://www.forest-trends.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/doc_5474.pdf

Of the total amount of 8.2 billion US Dollars in private capital invested in sustainable food and fiber, habitat conservation and water quality improvement and delivery, between 2004 and 2015, “only 9% of this huge investment occurred in Africa, with the bulk being invested in North and Latin America,” according to Ghana’s Minister of Environment Science Technology and Innovation (MESTI), Prof. Frimpong Boateng.

He added that, “the lack of a Biodiversity Information Monitoring System to effectively measure the sector’s impact, largely accounts for the low investment in African countries.”

The Biodiversity Information Management Forum

The Minister’s comments were contained in a statement read on his behalf by the Ministry’s Chief Director Mrs. Lovina Owusu at the 2019 Biodiversity Information Management Forum (BIMF) hosted by Ghana in Accra recently. It was on the theme: “Unlocking Biodiversity Data for Sustainable Development.” The purpose was to provide space for African countries to coordinate their efforts to digitize and utilize biodiversity data.

The idea behind the Forum, which was first held last year, in South Africa, is to ensure that Africa fits into the current global trend to provide centralized spatial data on biodiversity that can easily feed into national development decision making and planning. The Accra Forum brought together some key players in biodiversity information management in academia, scientific research institutions, government ministries and agencies as well as NGOs from Ghana, Malawi, Rwanda, Namibia and South Africa.

Lack of a Biodiversity Information Monitoring System to effectively measure the sector’s impact accounts for the low investment in African countries.

Prof. Frimpong Boateng called for a more serious attention to be given to the exercise of mobilizing biodiversity data and said, “For investors to confidently support any green enterprises for sustainable development, they would want consistent, standardized and accurate evaluations of natural capital and biodiversity.” He commended the effort being made to connect all biodiversity data and information systems to a centralized system, adding that “this is critical to addressing biodiversity data needs in Ghana.”

The Chairman for the Forum, Prof. Alfred Oteng-Yeboah expressed concern about Africa’s low capacity for generating data and said with the SDGs now in place, Africa has to sit up and address the existing gaps in biodiversity data. He admitted that “collection of data is not an easy task, but very expensive requiring lots of funds,” adding, “African governments were mandated to support data gathering with 1% of their GDP in the early days of the Organisation of African Unity now African Union.”

Prof. Oteng-Yeboah said “it now time for African governments to buckle up and support the current initiative to address the on-going decline of our biodiversity.”

The African Biodiversity Challenge Initiative

The Forum also served as an occasion to host the first African Biodiversity Challenge (ABC) Competition instituted in 2017. It is coordinated by the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) with support from the JRS Biodiversity Foundation.

The purpose of this maiden version of the Scheme was to award the country team that was able to best publish as many policy relevant data as possible by the end of 2018, so that the datasets were made available to national decision-makers.

Ghana, Malawi, Rwanda and Namibia Teams participated in the Scheme. Team Ghana was adjudged the best and awarded the Gold Prize for mobilizing an “impressive 23,362 data records that are highly policy-relevant and have already been used by multiple stakeholders.” They include Vital Info Consults, whose BOAME Cocoa Scheme, has used the data to identify shade-tree species that are desirable for planting in cocoa farms to improve ecological health of the farms.

Managers of the Community Resource Management Area (CREMA) around the Mole National Park, have also used the data to inform management plans on indicator species such as the Wild Water buffalo, which is considered endangered under the IUCN Redlist Species. This list provides a comprehensive inventory of the global conservation status of biological species and uses a set of criteria to evaluate the extinction risk of species.

We are at a crossroads. Do we continue on our current path, which will lead to a bleak future for humankind, or do we pivot to a more sustainable development pathway? Photo by Fredrick Mugira

Through the data, Biodiversity Heritage Associates have identified an invasive species that is prevalent in the Bosomkese Pamu Berekum and Goa Shelterbelt Forest Reserves. The group intends to further use the data for a general invasive species management programme in the reserves.

Additionally, Rural Support Network has used four datasets to identify rare birds and threatened frog species in parts of the Western region. With this insight, the group is supporting the creation of a new CREMA to conserve these species.

Team Ghana is made up of public institutions and NGOS namely: Conservation Alliance, A Rocha Ghana, University of Ghana and the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research’s Plant Genetic Resources Research Institute (CSIR-PGRRI).

In an interview, the Executive Director of Conservation Alliance, Yaw Osei-Owusu said Team Ghana’s work will be stepped up to develop information products focusing on agriculture and biodiversity as well as economic products. These will include Redlist ecosystem assessments, demarcation of spawning sites for fisheries, food distribution maps and non-traditional products contribution to food security.

Mr. Osei-Owusu said the Team will also explore additional partnership for making use of the data. Targets for such partnership are mainly biodiversity related projects like REDD+ and interventions under the Forest and Wildlife Policy, particularly CREMA formation and management.

He said the ultimate goal is the eventual establishment of a Biodiversity Information System that serves as a central hub where digitized biodiversity data are stored and formatted consistently in a user-friendly manner.

Loaga village (on the road). Zone of Baobab reforestation. Burkina Faso. Photo by Ollivier Girard/CIFOR

The Coordinator of the Initiative, Matthew Childs explained that the long term goal of the scheme is for countries to be able to use biodiversity data to measure the value of ecosystem services and its contribution to national economy. This will then be integrated into the relevant national development plans so governments can use that in making decisions and “hopefully protect areas of high ecosystem services.”

He said the reason this had not happened before, “is because data are not accessible, or have not been computed into formats that are understandable to decision makers, so that it’s not clear how to make decision based on that.”

In a statement read on his behalf the Director General of the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Prof. Victor Agyemang, commended the Initiative and promised to lend the diverse expertise of the CSIR to ensure the successful establishment of a central hub for Ghana’s Biodiversity Information System.

A Chief Research Scientist with CSIR Science Technology Policy Research Institute (CSIR-STEPRI) and the Chairman for the Ghana Connect Project, Dr. George Essegbey, welcomed the Initiative saying “it is one that Africa should embrace as it seeks to mobilize data as a foundation for high decision making and development.”

Smoked fish in Mbarara Central Market. Two percent of Uganda’s wetlands where some fish species breed from are lost annually.

Earlier, resource persons from several biodiversity data related projects updated participants on the progress they were making. Ernest Lamptey talked about the Ghana Connect Project and its strategic partnership with the ABC Initiative. He said agriculture is a priority area for the project. Therefore, Connect Ghana is collaborating with the Ghana Team to assemble potential data providers and end users to develop appropriate biodiversity information products to address specific demands for information in that sector.

Jeffery Manuel of SANBI presented an overview of the Institute’s data mobilization and management project, and stressed that “mobilizing biodiversity data is key for us because if our ecosystem collapses, we will collapse with it.” He said in order to close the existing gaps in the use of biodiversity information; the information should be made relevant and available for the people.

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