1 / 25

Introduction to CITES

CITES Secretariat. Introduction to CITES. CITES. CITES is the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora CITES was signed on 3 March 1973, and entered into force on 1 July 1975 CITES has been in operation for almost 40 years. CITES.

luz
Download Presentation

Introduction to CITES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CITES Secretariat Introduction to CITES

  2. CITES • CITES is the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora • CITES was signed on 3 March 1973, and entered into force on 1 July 1975 CITES has been in operation for almost 40 years

  3. CITES • The purpose of CITES is to ensure that wild fauna and flora in international trade are not exploited unsustainably

  4. CITES • CITES is an international convention that combines wildlife and trade themes with a legally binding instrument for achieving conservation and sustainable use objectives

  5. CITES • The Convention establishes an internationallegal framework together with common procedural mechanisms for the strictest control of international commercial trade in species threatened with extinction, and for an effective regulation of international trade in others

  6. CITES • This framework and common procedural mechanism are now used by 180countries to regulate and monitor international trade in listed species

  7. CITES Text • The text of the Convention outlines the basic provisions for trade and obligations of each Party, including: • Trade procedures and requirements • Enforcement measures • Trade facilitation • Exemptions and special procedures • Marking • Confiscations • Reporting • Trade with non-Parties • Amendment of the Appendices

  8. Resolutions and Decisions • The Conference of the Parties adopts Resolutionsto guide the interpretation and implementation of the Convention, and Decisions to provide specific short-term time-bound instructions • 89 Resolutions and 196 Decisions are in effect

  9. I II III CITES Appendices • Species subject to CITES regulation are divided amongst three Appendices "Species" means any species, subspecies, or geographically separate population thereof

  10. CITES Appendices Appendix I • Species threatened with extinction, which are or may be affected by trade • International (commercial) trade in wild-taken specimens is generally prohibited • 625 animal species and 301 plant species

  11. CITES Appendices Appendix II • Species not necessarily threatened with extinction, but for which trade must be controlled to avoid their becoming so, and species that resemble species already included in Appendix II • International trade is permitted but regulated • 4685 animal species and 29105 plant species (97% of all listings)

  12. CITES Appendices Appendix III • Species for which a country is asking Parties to help with its protection • International trade is permitted but regulated (less restrictive than Appendix II) • 147 animal species and 119 plant species

  13. Species in trade • Not all listed species appear in trade • Of the 34,782 listed species, some 3,680 animal species and 9,577 plant species have appeared in trade during 2004-2008 • Of these, 11,076 species appeared in 100 or fewer shipments worldwide during this period • Overall, 157 animal species and 1,878 plant species accounted for 90% of CITES transactions during this period

  14. CITES Appendices • The Appendices require careful interpretation • Species listings can be annotated to specify: • the inclusion or exclusion of designated geographically separate populations, subspecies, species, groups of species, or higher taxa, which may include export quotas; and • the types of specimens or export quotas

  15. Parts and derivatives • Parts and derivatives are always included for species in Appendix I, and for animal species in Appendix II • Annotations to the listings for plants in Appendix II, and for Appendix III species, determine which parts and derivatives are included (The Parties have agreed that for plant species included in Appendix II, the absence of an annotation relating to that species indicates that all readily recognizable parts and derivatives are included)

  16. CITES Permits and Certificates • CITES regulates the export, re-export, import and introduction from the sea of live and dead animals and plants andtheir parts and derivatives (listed species only) through a system of permits and certificates • These permits or certificates may only be issued if certain conditions are met and which must be presented when leaving or entering a country • For Appendix I and II species, the most important conditions are legal acquisition and that international trade must not be detrimental to their survival in the wild

  17. Collaboration and cooperation • Collaboration and cooperation at the national level are essential for CITES implementation • CITES Authorities • Resource sectors • Customs • Police • Judiciary • Affected stakeholders, including the private sector

  18. How CITES works Similar authorities Similar trade requirements Similar procedures COMMON PROCEDURAL MECHANISMS Similar rules and regulations Similar documents

  19. CITES Structure Conference of the Parties Standing Committee Animals Committee Plants Committee Secretariat FAO / IGOsNGOsprivate sectoretc. UNEP

  20. CITES Structure Conference of the Parties Permanent Committees Secretariat Guidance Recommendations Other MEAsUNEP-WCMCWCOICPO-InterpolITTO, FAOIUCNOther IGOsNGOsPrivate sector Management Authority Scientific Authority Officers in charge of implementing CITES

  21. Trade with non-Parties • Where export or re-export is to, or import is from, a non-Party, comparable documentation issued by the competent authorities which substantially conforms with CITES requirements for permits and certificates may be accepted • Parties accept documentation from States not party to the Convention only if the details of the competent authorities and scientific institutions of such States are included in the online CITES Directory • This also applies to specimens in transit destined for or coming from non-Parties

  22. Summary • CITES is an international agreement between governments aimed at ensuring that no species of wild fauna or flora is unsustainably exploited for international trade • The Convention establishes the international legal framework and common procedural mechanisms for an effective regulation of international trade in Appendix-II and -III species, and for the strictest control of international trade in Appendix-I species • Inter-agency and inter-sector collaboration is essential for the effective implementation of CITES

  23. Summary • CITES regulates international trade in wild fauna and flora listed in its Appendices on the basis of a system of permits and certificates which are issued when certain conditions are met, and which must be presented when leaving and entering a country • For Appendix-II and –III species, international trade is permitted but regulated, and for Appendix-I species, international (commercial) trade in wild-taken specimens is generally prohibited • The Conference of the Parties is the ultimate decision-making body in CITES

  24. Trade should be legal, sustainable and traceable Legal trade can be beneficial for conservation of wild species, and for livelihoods Illegal trade can pose a serious risk to the conservation of wild species

  25. CITES SecretariatGenevawww.cites.org

More Related