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IUCN and Shell jointly address conservation challenges
23 December
2013 | News story
IUCN,
International Union for Conservation of Nature, and Shell have agreed to work
together to address key conservation challenges, focusing on rehabilitating
marshlands in Iraq, decommissioning North Sea oil infrastructure in a way that
preserves biodiversity and reviewing oil spill remediation in the Niger Delta.
IUCN will
also continue to work with Shell on developing IUCN knowledge products,
including standards to identify ‘key biodiversity areas’ - the most important
sites for biodiversity conservation worldwide.
New
initiatives include exploring the concept of ‘Net Positive Impact’ on
biodiversity and implementing pilot activities on sustainable biofuels. These
aim to secure a more central place for science and wider participation of other
businesses and organizations in decision making processes.
With the new
agreement, signed on 20 December 2013, IUCN aims to engage with Shell on issues
where it believes it can influence improvements in the company’s operational
practices. IUCN and Shell have agreed to pursue a targeted and focused approach
aimed at facilitating specific gains for biodiversity and for those who depend
on it for their survival.
“IUCN
remains committed to working alongside companies – including the high-impact
ones – to address the way they affect biodiversity,” says Julia
Marton-Lefèvre, IUCN Director General. “We are learning with every
engagement, making more specific and more substantive demands for change and
requiring more from the companies we work with.”
“We have had
a very constructive relationship with IUCN for many years and welcome the
renewal of our collaboration with them for the next four years,” says Peter
Voser, Chief Executive Office of Royal Dutch Shell. “The new agreement
aligns us with common goals related to important conservation themes.”
IUCN and
Shell have worked together since 1999. The collaboration has resulted in Shell
becoming the first oil and gas company to make and sustain a public “no-go”
commitment regarding natural UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Following IUCN’s
advice, Shell has also made modifications to the routing of pipelines off
Sakhalin Island in the north Pacific to safeguard the habitat of the critically
endangered Western Grey Whale.
For more
information, please contact:
• Ewa
Magiera, IUCN Media Relations, +41 79 856 76 26, ewa.magiera@iucn.org
• Marina Teahon, Communications Support Officer, IUCN Global Business & Biodiversity Programme +41 22 999 0288, marina.teahon@iucn.org
• Marina Teahon, Communications Support Officer, IUCN Global Business & Biodiversity Programme +41 22 999 0288, marina.teahon@iucn.org