Roundup: EU pushes further tightening of wildlife trade rules at global summit
Xinhua, September 24, 2016 Adjust font size:
The European Union (EU) said on Saturday it will seek stricter international measures against wildlife trafficking, in line with the EU action plan on wildlife trafficking.
The EU issued the statement at the 17th Conference of the Parties to the UN Convention on Trade in Endangered Species (CITES CoP17) in Johannesburg.
Representatives from 182 countries will agree to tangible measures to better protect some of the planet's most vulnerable species.
The conference, which opened on Saturday and will last until October 5, provides a forum for Parties to review the implementation of the CITES Convention, which covers more than 35,000 plants and animals, ensuring that trade remains legal, traceable and sustainable, and to adopt new binding measures for wildlife protection.
The EU is participating for the first time as a full member of CITES.
The EU and its member states, represented by Commissioner for Environment, Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Karmenu Vella, come to Johannesburg with a united voice and an ambitious agenda, the EU statement said.
The EU will propose to address wildlife trafficking and the corruption associated with it, to define international standards on trade in hunting trophies, ensuring that such trade can only happen when both legal and sustainable.
It will also propose to include additional marine (sharks), timber (rosewood), and exotic pet species (reptiles) in CITES, or upgrading their protection under CITES (parrots and mammals) as they are subject to unsustainable or illegal international trade, the statement said.
Commissioner Vella said: "The EU is proud to be a world leader in the fight against wildlife trafficking. We see the CITES CoP as an opportunity to get even tougher on the fight against wildlife trafficking and the corruption that fuels it. Through CITES, we will be working with our partners to implement the new EU Wildlife Action Plan to the full. We are building a global alliance among countries to protect wildlife where it lives, block points of transit, and stamp out the illegal demand".
In particular, the EU will support a continuation of the ban on international trade in ivory and press for the adoption of strong measures against ivory trafficking, as well as trafficking affecting rhinoceroses, tigers, great apes, pangolins and rosewood, said the statement.
The EU's efforts are part of a broader approach to fight illegal trade in wildlife. Earlier this year the EU agreed on a comprehensive Wildlife Trafficking Action Plan which will be implemented jointly by the EU institutions and the member states up to 2020. Endit