Indicate which actions have been carried out to implement this Resolution :
Capacity-building
Convene stakeholders/Networking
Education/Communication/Raising awareness
Fundraising
Describe the results/achievements of the actions taken:
The IUCN World Conservation Congress in Marseille, France, in September 2021 adopted WCC 2020 Res 123, establishing a process for development of an IUCN policy, to include both an inclusive process across the Union and the appointment of a Policy Development Working Group.
IUCN Council deliberated the Resolution at Part I of their 108th Meeting, online in November 2022. Their Decision C108/2 approved both a detailed process for implementation of the Resolution, and Terms of Reference for specific bodies to be involved.
IUCN Council further discussed the process in their 109th Meeting in Gland, Switzerland in May 2023, and their Decision C109/8 approved a revised process for implementation of the Resolution and revised Terms of Reference for the specific bodies involved. This documentation adds specification to the details of the inclusive process (including for it to encompass a “Citizens’ Assembly” established through stratified random selection from across the IUCN Membership, and now underway) and of the Policy Development Working Group. The process of appointment of the Policy Development Working Group members ran from June through October 2023, with appointments finalised by the IUCN President on 13 October 2023. The International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology was recruited, through the IUCN procurement process, to provide training and facilitation services to the process.
The inclusive and participatory process comprised the following phases:
A call for information was run from June through August 2023.
The IUCN Citizens’ Assembly on Synthetic Biology in relation to Nature Conservation convened participants from IUCN Members selected in a stratified random fashion according to Member category, Statutory region, and gender. It undertook a training workshop in Nairobi, Kenya, 19–26 November 2023, followed by a deliberation workshop in Bangkok, Thailand, 21–28 February 2024, where it produced recommendations for the Policy Development Working Group.
The production of a guidance document, an introductory video, and a briefing document on what synthetic biology is and why its implications for nature conservation require inclusive debate. These are available to all IUCN Members on IUCN Engage (login required).
Solicitation of feedback from all IUCN constituents 15 March 2024 – 31 May 2024, in particular through the IUCN National, Regional, and Interregional Committees, the IUCN Regional Conservation Fora, the IUCN Commissions, and the IUCN Indigenous Peoples’ Organisation Members, with IUCN Engage providing a feedback template for IUCN constituents to share their inputs.
Further solicitation of feedback from all IUCN constituents 11 July 2024 – 16 August 2024, with IUCN Engage again providing a feedback template for IUCN constituents to share their inputs.
IUCN is very grateful to all constituents who participated in the inclusive and participatory process.
Meanwhile, the Policy Development Working Group met 26 February – 2 March 2024 to develop a first draft policy, on the basis of the Citizens’ Assembly recommendations and other inputs as specified in WCC 2020 Res 123. This underwent IUCN Union-wide peer review 15 March – 26 April 2024, receiving 391 comments. The Policy Development Working Group met for a second time 17–22 June 2024, comprehensively revising the policy to produce a second draft on the basis of the peer review comments and the feedback received through the inclusive and participatory process, and documenting point-by-point how each comment was addressed. The second draft policy then underwent IUCN Union-wide peer review 11 July – 16 August 2024, receiving 430 comments. The Policy Development Working Group them met for a third time 16–21 September 2024, again comprehensively revising the policy to produce a third draft on the basis of the peer review comments and the feedback received through the inclusive and participatory process, and again documenting point-by-point how each comment was addressed. In accordance with WCC 2020 Res 123, the third-draft policy has now been transmitted to IUCN Council which will transmit it, through a motion, to the next meeting of the IUCN World Conservation Congress for debate and potential adoption by the Members of IUCN.
What challenges/obstacles have been encountered in the implementation of this Resolution and how were they overcome :
Resource mobilisation is a major challenge. DG wrote to all IUCN Member governments in late 2022 soliciting support.
To date, generous contributions towards funding the development of the IUCN policy on synthetic biology and nature conservation have been provided by the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection of the Government of Germany, and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. More generally, the IUCN Council has endorsed a request for financial support in implementing the Resolution, sent by the IUCN Director General to IUCN Government Members and philanthropic foundations. This solicitation remains open to ensure sufficient resource mobilisation, with the anticipation that a draft IUCN Policy on Synthetic Biology and Nature Conservation is ready for consideration by the IUCN Membership at the 2025 IUCN World Conservation Congress.
Importantly, IUCN is not approaching private sector and campaigning organisations for financial support, to reduce any risk of perceived conflict of interest.
Briefly describe what future actions are needed for the implementation of this Resolution:
Please refer to process documentation online at www.iucn.org/synbio
Are these actions planned for yet: