
Canada - building conservation quality, quantity and collaboration
Building Conservation Quality, Quantity, and Collaboration
Canada released its national, 2020 biodiversity targets, based on the Aichi Targets, in 2015. The first of these 19 targets focused on increasing area-based conservation through the use of protected areas and Other Effective area-based Conservation Measures (OECM). At that time, Canada had protected 10.5% terrestrial and freshwater area and 0.9% marine and coastal area; numbers that had remained relatively consistent for years. Fast forward six years, with historic levels of government funding for nature, new and expanded pan-Canadian partnerships and the attention that only a measurable target can create – Canada had increased the total terrestrial and marine area protected or conserved by 76%. Canada is now at 13.5% terrestrial and 13.9% marine conserved area.
This effort resulted in two guidance reports We Rise Together from the Indigenous Circle of Experts and Canada’s Conservation Vision from a National Advisory Panel. Following on these recommendations, a suite of aspirational, pan-Canadian commitments from national and subnational governments was released in One with Nature[1], which identified four priority areas for collaborative action to increase the quantity and quality of Canada’s protected and conserved areas network in the right ways.
Priority 1 – Expand the system of protected and conserved areas
Priority 2 – Promote greater recognition and support for existing Indigenous Rights, Responsibilities, and Priorities in Conservation
Priority 3 - Maximize Conservation Outcomes
Priority 4 – Build Support and Participation for Conservation with a Broader Community
and conserved areas. By the end of 2021, Canada was reporting 13.5% terrestrial and freshwater area and 13.9% marine area protected or conserved - including over 170 terrestrial OECMs and over 35 marine OECMs. These OECM cover 90,789 km2 of terrestrial and freshwater area and 274,555 km2 of marine and coastal area.
This was accomplished through partnership actions such as:
Indigenous-led conservation efforts resulting in areas such as
Edéhzhíe National Wildlife Area and Dehcho Protected Area –
an area of great ecological, cultural, and spiritual significance for the Dehcho
and Tłichô Dene; and
Thaidene Nëné Indigenous Protected Area -
an Indigenous protected area that was designated by the Łutsël K’é Dene First
Nation and portions of which have been designated a national park reserve, a
territorial protected area, and a wildlife conservation area.
The recognition of OECMs such as Canadian Forces Base Shilo, which is home to 17
at-risk species including insects, grassland birds and the area’s only lizard - the Prairie
Skink.
The designation of Marine Protected Areas such as Tuvaijuittuq Marine Protected Area - meaning “the place where the ice never melts” in Inuktitut. Located in an area that has been used by Inuit for travel and harvesting, this culturally and historically significant marine area is considered globally, nationally and regionally unique due to the presence of multi-year pack ice.
Canadian Commitments post-2020 and Continued Action
The Government of Canada has made significant investments in nature and nature-based climate solutions to address climate change and biodiversity loss, including by setting an ambitious target to protect 25 percent of our lands and oceans by 2025, while working toward 30 percent by 2030. As a member of the High Ambition Coalition for Nature and People and the Global Ocean Alliance, Canada is working to build support for a 30 percent target internationally.
In 2021, the Government of Canada committed $4.1 billion to nature protection, including an additional $2.3 billion over five years for Canada’s Enhanced Nature Legacy, to continue supporting nature conservation measures across the country, including Indigenous leadership in conservation.
With many projects already advancing across the country – led nationally, sub-nationally or locally - Canada is well on its way to meeting its target.
By working in partnership, Canada and Canadians are making progress on recovering species at risk, while restoring and protecting the habitats that support Canada's incredible biodiversity. Through actions like these, Canada is working to halt and reverse nature loss by 2030 and achieve a full recovery for nature by 2050.
Canada’s approach to reaching 30% by 2030 nationally is a three-prong approach:
Protecting the right amount of habitat to support viable populations of all species;
Protecting the right areas so protected and conserved areas can function as a representative ecological network, not simply as “islands of green;” and
Managing areas in the right way—a way that looks for cooperation across jurisdictional boundaries, and respects natural boundaries where possible