•2 min read•from Frontiers in Marine Science | New and Recent Articles
Grounding the BBNJ agreement’s resource mobilization goal: cost benchmarks and the case for needs-based funding
Our take
The BBNJ agreement establishes a pivotal legal framework for the conservation and sustainable use of marine biodiversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction. Effective implementation of this framework is contingent upon adequate financing, particularly for developing States Parties. Article 52(11) mandates the Conference of the Parties to set an initial resource mobilization goal through 2030. This review synthesizes cost data and benchmarks from similar international mechanisms, highlighting the need for empirical, needs-based funding assessments to inform resource mobilization discussions and support comprehensive implementation.

The Agreement Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ agreement) established a historic legal framework for conserving and sustainably using marine biological diversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction. However, translating this framework into implementation hinges critically on adequate financing, particularly for developing States Parties. Article 52(11) of the BBNJ agreement mandates the Conference of the Parties to establish an “initial resource mobilization goal through 2030” for the special fund. To support this mandate, this review synthesizes available cost data and institutional benchmarks from analogous international conservation and marine governance mechanisms relevant to activities eligible for funding under the special fund, including: capacity-building and technology transfer; implementation of the agreement including area-based management tools and environmental impact assessments; conservation and sustainable use programs by Indigenous Peoples and local communities; and public consultations. We identify cost ranges supported by empirical precedent, acknowledge significant research gaps, and discuss implications for COP-level resource mobilization discussions. This synthesis aims to support the evidence base necessary to support the Conference of the Parties’ deliberation on Article 52(11), emphasizing that the resource mobilization goal must be grounded in developing States Parties’ evidence-based needs assessments rather than comparable mechanisms’ allocations, which reflect budgetary realities rather than comprehensive implementation requirements.
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Tagged with
#marine science#marine biodiversity#marine life databases#ocean data#environmental DNA#data visualization#research collaboration#climate change impact#research datasets#BBNJ agreement#resource mobilization#marine biological diversity#areas beyond national jurisdiction#financing#developing States Parties#capacity-building#technology transfer#environmental impact assessments#area-based management tools#COP-level