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Briefing
To inform preparation of a new strategic framework, this briefing brings together some of the results from the study developed by the EEA in cooperation with the Institute for European Environmental Policy (IEEP), the UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC) and Trinomics. The study is a preliminary report to inform future, more in-depth analyses of options for reporting, collating and assessing protected area management effectiveness (PAME) more effectively at EU and global levels. It further examines the following:
The study consisted of a literature review, a questionnaire among members of the Eionet National Reference Centres for Biological Diversity (NRC BD) and Land Use and Spatial Planning (NRC-LUSP) and country case studies for Finland, France, Ireland, the Netherlands and Slovakia. The study identified key strengths and weaknesses of current management approaches against established guidance on PAME. These findings informed key recommendations on how to further improve Natura 2000 effectiveness in the years to come.
Methodologies for PAME assessments are well established in the EU and follow the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) World Commission on Protected Areas (WCPA) management effectiveness framework (Figure 1)[2]. This study demonstrated that most approaches focus on the early stages of the protected area management cycle (e.g. planning) rather than on actual conservation outcomes.
Source: Hockings et al., 2006.
A range of methodologies are currently used by EU Member States to assess effectiveness. However, only a relatively small share of Natura 2000 sites has been assessed at least once. Fifteen Member States report repeat assessments and usually only for a small number of sites. The EU and its Member States, as parties to the CBD, committed to assessing the management effectiveness of 60 % of the total area of protected areas by 2015. The Global Database on Protected Area Management Effectiveness (GD-PAME) reports that only 7.6 % of the recorded protected areas in the EU have been assessed.
There are significant differences in the number of sites assessed between EU Member States. Although the findings show significant underreporting, they suggest that the EU is well off its global target. Meeting that target will require an increased uptake of and reporting on the assessment.
The study confirmed the findings of earlier evaluations that the full and timely implementation of the nature directives would have resulted in more effective management. This includes adherence to standards set out in European Commission guidance, which would have also helped deliver on many of the key PAME criteria. Preliminary reporting under the EU Nature Directives further indicates that none of the five analysed Member States show significant increases in the proportion of habitats and species with a Favourable Conservation Status. It demonstrates the significant improvements in management effectiveness required to capitalise on recent progress made on planning and process. Despite recent efforts to improve monitoring and evaluation of PAME in some Member States, including for Natura 2000 sites, this appears to be at a preliminary stage. A fundamental problem is that site-specific conservation objectives have not been set for some sites and many are insufficiently specific and measurable. Other deficiencies include:
The study demonstrates that improving standards in site management planning and the implementation and evaluation of these remain a significant challenge for many EU Member States.
As the nature directives are similar to framework directives and are not highly prescriptive, most key PAME criteria are at least partly left to the discretion of competent national or regional authorities and site managers. For some criteria, in relation to governance, transparency and public participation, the nature directives hardly include specific legal requirements. As a result, critical information on Natura 2000 site management, which is important to assess the underlying drivers of conservation success or failure, is currently not reported.
Even in those Member States that have well-established systems for assessing management effectiveness in Natura 2000, such information is often not available. Two of the countries analysed do not have an overview of the sites that have management plans in place. Questionnaire respondents indicated that a lack of capacity —in terms of both knowledge and staff time — is a key barrier to systematic Natura 2000 management monitoring and assessment. The investment needed to overcome this barrier should therefore be reflected in prioritised action frameworks (PAFs) and integrated into EU and national investment programmes and decisions.
The findings identified different approaches to improving management effectiveness. These had varying levels of ambition, both between and within Member States. Persistent bottlenecks to inform and evaluate effective management design and planning include:
Only two of the five Member States studied in detail have established management plans for all (France) or nearly all (the Netherlands) Natura 2000 sites in their territory. For two Member States (Finland, Ireland), information on the number of sites with management plans was not readily available. This illustrates a lack of transparency on rudimentary information for assessing management effectiveness. Despite these challenges, the case studies also showed innovative approaches to overcoming them. Examples are the integration of public participation in Finland and France, and successful efforts to increase the effectiveness of agricultural nature management in Ireland and the Netherlands.
All five Member States studied show significant variation in evaluation and assessment of management effectiveness:
The findings from the five countries suggest that significant steps will have to be made in tracking management and the assessment of its effectiveness, in particular on process indicators in addition to ecological indicators.
Management measures and their effectiveness are constrained to some extent in most Natura 2000 sites. In particular, most sites are under some form of human use, such as for agriculture, forestry, water resources, fisheries and recreation. Sites can also have other management objectives, for example, flood management. Therefore, although Natura 2000 site management plans are important for such sites and need to take into account other sectoral objectives, plans focused on specific human uses may be of equal or greater importance in practice. This is, for example, the case with forest management plans, fisheries management plans and rural development plans.
Even though site-level management in some countries (the Netherlands and France) is evaluated as sufficient, ecological objectives are not met because of pressures coming from outside the sites, e.g. nitrogen pollution through air and water or human-induced changes to hydrological regimes. Therefore, complementary broad environmental measures across the wider environment remain important to meet conservation objectives, for example through implementation of the Water Framework Directive and National Emission Ceilings Directive.
On-site management cannot deal with all key pressures and threats to Natura 2000 objectives (e.g. pollution and hydrological change). However, improving management effectiveness will also require the implementation of policies critical to ensuring environmental baseline conditions, but this is beyond the scope of this study. Particularly important are the EU Water Framework Directive, Marine Strategy Framework Directive and air policy, and their integration into agriculture and forest policies.
The study compared assessment criteria for the IUCN Green List of Protected and Conserved Areas (GLPCA) against requirements under the nature directives. This shows that there are significant overlaps, in particular in management design and planning. It demonstrates that fuller and more timely implementation of the nature directives would make an important contribution to achieving management effectiveness in Natura 2000 sites. However, the comparison also highlights gaps, for example in requirements for good governance, such as stakeholder participation, and in demonstrating successful conservation outcomes at site level. Greater use of standardised PAME assessment tools, such as the GLPCA, in Natura 2000 sites could therefore provide invaluable insights to enhance the network’s effectiveness.
Practitioners who responded to the questionnaire for this study welcome a stronger, common focus on Natura 2000 management effectiveness. They raised concerns over the suitability of current EU reporting tools for capturing management effectiveness at site level and current capacity gaps for implementing more systematic and detailed PAME assessments. The questionnaire and case studies identified common challenges to management effectiveness. Based on this, the study investigated which GLPCA indicators would be most relevant to explore in order to better monitor and report on Natura 2000 management effectiveness. These are mostly those assessing:
The GLPCA set of indicators is peer reviewed and provides the most comprehensive and up-to-date approach based on established systems. Applying it systematically at site level would therefore certainly improve insight into Natura 2000 management effectiveness. Of the 50 indicators, 25 do not currently explicitly adhere to the requirements of the nature directives. More importantly, using the GLPCA approach in each Natura 2000 site would require significant resources. Some respondents to the questionnaire indicated that such resources are currently not available for many sites. However, to obtain a better insight on progress in terms of implementation and common barriers to and opportunities for improving effectiveness, the analysis identified eight criteria that are the most relevant to report on. These are outlined in Table 1.
Component/Criterion |
Indicator |
BHD requirement |
Good governance |
Procedures are in place to ensure that results from monitoring, evaluation and consultation are used to inform management and planning processes, including establishing goals and objectives |
Yes |
Good governance |
Planning and decision-making recognise relevant conditions, issues and goals at national and regional scales that affect the protected area |
Yes |
Effective management |
The site demonstrates that management activities and policies and/or legislation and regulations are being implemented and are consistent with the management plan (or equivalent) |
Yes |
Effective management |
The site has adequate numbers of appropriately trained staff provided by the responsible entity and properly supervised to implement all aspects of its management plan or equivalent in the long term |
No |
Effective management |
Financial constraints are not threatening the capacity of management to achieve the site’s objectives |
No |
Effective management |
The site management is implementing a work programme that identifies effective responses to each of the major pressures and threats to target habitat types and species and the ecological coherence of the site, as well as other major site values |
Yes |
Effective management |
A threshold level has been specified for each set of performance measures relating to natural values that, if achieved, demonstrate objectively that the associated major site value is being successfully conserved. Threshold determination can include the assessment of conservation impact based on change in major values over a specified period compared with those anticipated without the protected and conserved area |
Yes |
Conservation outcomes |
The site meets or exceeds (agreed) performance thresholds for the conservation of major natural values |
No |
Note: BHD, Birds and Habitat Directives.
Source: Prepared for this study.
Key EU legal requirements relevant to Natura 2000 effectiveness need more transparent and strategic enforcement. This can, for example, be done through an enhanced environmental implementation review process, with more binding and time-bound commitments. This could be supported by more proactive approaches at national and/or regional levels to speed up implementation and enforcement, for example through national courts and courts of auditors. Examples of requirements are the establishment of conservation objectives (Habitats Directive, Article 4) and conservation measures (Article 6.1) and meeting environmental objectives in water-dependent protected areas (Article 4(c) of the EU Water Framework Directive).
Relevant strategies and investment programming by public authorities at all levels need biodiversity-proofing to prevent perverse incentives to achieving Natura 2000 objectives. Examples of these are the intensification of agriculture and forestry, unsustainable renewable energy development and infrastructure development for urbanisation or transport.
Natura 2000 management requirements should be integrated into other relevant sectoral plans between relevant authorities and stakeholders, for example forest management plans, fisheries management plans and rural development plans.
The European Commission and Member States should step up efforts to:
Identifying measures in management plans for all Natura 2000 sites should urgently be prioritised. This includes ensuring more transparent and regular interim evaluation of their implementation, in particular for sites where established management measures do not adhere to the standards set in EU guidance.
The European Commission and Member States should share targeted knowledge on assessing and evaluating management effectiveness that focuses more strongly on conservation outcomes. This could be done through a biogeographical process but it can also be done at a more operational level in the regions, perhaps with support of the European Committee of the Regions and networks of local authorities where relevant.
The European Commission and Member States should strengthen EU cooperation on better, earlier, more frequent and bottom-up stakeholder participation in and training on management effectiveness. This can, for example, be done using the EU’s Biodiversity Information System for Europe (BISE) and biogeographical seminars. More practical peer-to-peer exchanges between regional authorities and site managers are also an option.
The Commission should explore ways to positively and proactively highlight best practice in improving management effectiveness, for example by introducing a new Natura 2000 Award category for projects that made a large contribution to improving PAME.
The European Commission and Member States should explore improving current Natura 2000 reporting on management effectiveness in a cost-effective way. In particular, this should consider criteria that track the following for each Natura 2000 site:
This information could be included in the site management section of the standard data form and updated annually by competent authorities.
The European Commission and Member States should fill the investment gap for management to ensure adequate resources are available for planning, processing and delivering as well as for evaluation and assessment. Future templates for the Natura 2000 PAFs could include a funding requirement for assessing management effectiveness. Member States should use available opportunities for integrated funding under the agreed new Multi-annual Financial Framework.
1 CBD Decision: COP 10 Decision X/31.
2 The IUCN WCPA broad framework provides a design that can be used to create site-specific and region-specific assessment methodologies: the so-called PAME tools.
BirdLife Finland, et al., 2018, Nature score card Finland.
Bouwma I., et al., 2018, Natura 2000 management plans in France and the Netherlands: Carrots, sticks, sermons and different problems.
CBD, 2010, COP Decision X/31 on protected areas, Convention on Biological Diversity.
EEA, 2012, Protected areas in Europe — An overview, EEA Report No 5/2012, European Environment Agency.
EEA, 2015, State of nature in the EU — Results from reporting under the nature directives 2007-2012, EEA Technical Report No 2/2015, European Environment Agency.
Hockings, M., et al., 2006, Evaluating effectiveness — A framework for assessing management effectiveness of protected areas, International Union for Conservation of Nature.
Interview, 2020, Interviews with national protected area experts (January 2020).
IUCN and WCPA, 2017, IUCN Green List of Protected and Conserved Areas: Standard, version 1.1. International Union for Conservation of Nature and World Commission on Protected Areas, Gland, Switzerland.
IUCN, et al., 2019, ‘The view from Gran Paradiso — Final statement from global workshop on how to enable and measure improved performance in protected areas’, International Union for Conservation of Nature, Gran Paradiso National Park, Italy, 24-28 June.
For references, please go to https://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/management-effectiveness-in-the-eus/management-effectiveness-in-the-eu or scan the QR code.
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