Visions for nature and nature’s contributions to people for the 21st century: Report from an IPBES visioning workshop held on 4-8 September 2017 in Auckland, New Zealand

Carolyn J. Lundquist, H.M. Pereira, J.R.M. Alkemade, E. den Belder, Sonja Carvalho Ribeiro, Kate Davies, Alison Greenaway, S.I.S.E. Karlsson-Vinkhuyzen, H. Kim, Tanya Lazarova, Laura Pereira, G. Peterson, Federica Ravera, Thelma van den Brink, Alejandro Argumedo, Clarissa Arida, Dolors Armenteras, Anne-Gaelle Ausseil, Brigitte Baptiste, Julie BelangerKelly Bingham, Austin Bowden-Kerby, Mingchang Cao, Jocelyn Nettleton-Carino, Paul Andre Van Damme, R. Devivo, Fiona Dickson, Jean Paul Dushimumuremyi, S. Ferrier, Adriana Flores-Díaz, Melissa Foley, Jaime Garcia Marquez, Paulina Giraldo-Perez, Suzie Greenhalgh, D.J. Hamilton, Preston Hardison, Geoff Hicks, Ken Hughey, Richelle Kahui-McConnell, Geci Wangechi Karuri-Sebina, M. de Kock, Paul Leadley, Frederic Lemaitre, Elina Maltseva, Carlos A. de Mattos Scaramuzza, Mona Metwaly, W. Nelson, Hien Ngo, Christian Neumann, Craig Norrie, Joanne Perry, Rodrigo Quintana, Vanesa Eliana Rodriguez Osuna, Richard Röhrl, J. Seager, Helen Sharpe, Tui Shortland, Polina Shulbaeva, U. Rashid Sumaila, Yasuo Takahashi, Titeux Titeux, Sunandan Tiwari, Christopher Trisos, Andrei Ursache, Amanda Wheatley, David Wilson, S. Wood, Ernita van Wyk, Tian Xiang Yue, Dina Zulfikar

Research output: Book/ReportReportAcademic

Abstract

Existing scenarios of biodiversity and ecosystem services (BES) have important limitations and gaps that constrain their usefulness for the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). Specifically, they fail to incorporate policy objectives related to nature conservation and social-ecological feedbacks, they do not address the linkages between biodiversity and ecosystem services, and they are typically relevant at only a particular spatial scale. In addition, nature and its benefits are treated as the consequence of human decisions, but are not at the centre of the analysis. To address these issues, the IPBES Scenarios and Models Expert Group initiated the development of a set of Multiscale Scenarios for Nature Futures based on positive visions for human relationships with nature.
The first step of this process was a visioning workshop with stakeholders and experts on 4-8 September 2017 in Auckland, New Zealand. A total of 73 participants from inter-governmental organisations, national government organisations, non-governmental organisations, academia and the private sector, from 31 countries, and with a range of sectoral expertise on biodiversity topics, from urban development to agriculture to fisheries, worked together in a visioning exercise. This report documents the results from this visioning workshop to inform further stakeholder consultation and the development of the associated multiscale scenarios by modelers and experts.
This creative visioning exercise was carried out in four steps based on a suite of participatory methods that were used to develop visions of alternative futures. First the participants identified important themes to develop the visions. Next, thematic groups identified the main trends for BES in each theme and a set of “Seeds” of emerging initiatives leading to positive futures for our relationship with nature. Implications of what would happen across a range of sectors were identified for each seed. Then a pathway analysis of how the current regime in each theme may be transformed into the future desirable regime was carried
out. Narratives were then built for the visions emerging from each group. Finally, commonalities of visions across the groups were identified, and the regional relevance of each vision for different parts of the world was assessed.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages123
ISBN (Electronic)9780473426118
Publication statusPublished - 2017
EventIPBES workshop New visions for nature and nature’s contributions to people for the 21st century
- Auckland, New Zealand
Duration: 4 Sept 20177 Sept 2017

Publication series

NameNIWA Science and Technology Series
No.83

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