BETA

Awaiting committee decision



2016/2076(INI) EU action plan against wildlife trafficking
RoleCommitteeRapporteurShadows
Opinion DEVE
Lead ENVI
Opinion IMCO
Opinion INTA MCCLARKIN Emma (ECR)
Opinion JURI CHRYSOGONOS Kostas (GUE/NGL)
Opinion PECH
Lead committee dossier: ENVI/8/06475
Legal Basis RoP 052

Activites

  • 2016/05/12 Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
  • 2016/02/26 Non-legislative basic document published
    • COM(2016)0087 summary
    • DG {'url': 'http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/environment/', 'title': 'Environment'}, VELLA Karmenu

Documents

History

(these mark the time of scraping, not the official date of the change)

activities/1/committees/1/date
2016-04-13T00:00:00
activities/1/committees/1/rapporteur
  • group: ALDE name: BEARDER Catherine
activities/1/committees/1/shadows
  • group: EPP name: PETIR Marijana
  • group: S&D name: MELIOR Susanne
  • group: GUE/NGL name: OMARJEE Younous
  • group: Verts/ALE name: TAYLOR Keith
  • group: ENF name: D'ORNANO Mireille
committees/1/date
2016-04-13T00:00:00
committees/1/rapporteur
  • group: ALDE name: BEARDER Catherine
committees/1/shadows
  • group: EPP name: PETIR Marijana
  • group: S&D name: MELIOR Susanne
  • group: GUE/NGL name: OMARJEE Younous
  • group: Verts/ALE name: TAYLOR Keith
  • group: ENF name: D'ORNANO Mireille
procedure/dossier_of_the_committee
Old
ENVI/8/06475
New
ENVI/8/06099
activities/1/committees/3/date
2016-05-23T00:00:00
activities/1/committees/3/rapporteur
  • group: ECR name: MCCLARKIN Emma
committees/3/date
2016-05-23T00:00:00
committees/3/rapporteur
  • group: ECR name: MCCLARKIN Emma
activities/0/docs/0/text
  • PURPOSE: to propose EU action plan against trafficking in wildlife.

    BACKGROUND: wildlife trafficking – particularly in elephants and rhinos, corals, pangolins, tigers and great apes - has become one of the world's most profitable organised crimes. As an example, the illicit ivory trade has more than doubled since 2007, and is over three times greater than it was in 1998. Between 2007 and 2013, rhino poaching increased by 7000% in South Africa, endangering the very survival of this species. Sources estimate the profits from such trafficking at between EUR 8 and EUR 20 billion annually.

    The EU has an important role to play in tackling this traffic, as Europe is currently a destination market and a hub for trafficking in transit to other regions. It is also a region from which certain species are sourced for illegal trade.

    Numerous measures to combat wildlife trafficking have been adopted under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), a key international treaty regulating the international trade in wildlife, to which the EU became a party in 2015. The EU has already shown leadership in tackling the illegal trade in natural resources by adopting ambitious policies on timber and fishery products.

    The European Parliament called for an Action Plan in a resolution adopted in January 2014. The establishment of an EU Action Plan has also been supported by many EU Member States, international organisations, NGOs, and concerned businesses at a stakeholder consultation on the EU approach against wildlife trafficking, launched by the Commission in February 2014.

    CONTENT: the EU Action Plan demonstrates that the EU is ready to live up to international expectations and commitments, and that it is raising the level of its ambition as regards action against the illegal trade in wildlife. It is a major contribution towards the Sustainable Development Goals set under the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development agreed by heads of state at a UN summit in September 2015.

    The EU Action Plan comprises a series of measures to be taken by EU institutions and/or Member States. It provides the impetus and framework for making better use of existing EU resources. The measures are essentially designed to improve cooperation between all the players concerned, make more effective use of existing tools and policies, and strengthen synergies between them, so that wildlife trafficking can be better tackled across the EU and globally.

    The measures, which are designed to address a complex problem holistically by involving all relevant organisations, are based on three priorities:

    1) Preventing wildlife trafficking and addressing its root causes:

    • reduce the demand for and the supply of illegal wildlife products, both within the EU and globally, by supporting specific campaigns and further limiting ivory trade within and from the EU ;
    • ensure that rural communities in source countries are more engaged in wildlife conservation, and that they benefit more from it;
    • engage more actively with relevant business sectors, ranging from those active in wildlife trade or using wildlife products to those that provide services to the trade;
    • take multilateral and bilateral measures to tackle corruption, a crucial enabling factor for wildlife trafficking throughout the enforcement chain.

    2) Implementing and enforcing existing rules and combating organised wildlife crime more effectively:

    • review shortcomings in implementation for all Member States, and develop strategies for tackling them, to ensure that existing rules are enforced more consistently across the EU;
    • strengthen the strategic aspect of checks and enforcement by setting enforcement priorities jointly and having Europol and Eurojust provide dedicated support for cross-border cases;
    • boost the capacity of all links in the enforcement chain and the judiciary to take effective action against wildlife trafficking in the EU. By improving inter-agency data flow and by sharing best practice at EU level;
    • ensure targeted awareness-raising amongst specialists on organised crime, cybercrime and money laundering;
    • ensure that Member States’ laws on organised crime cover wildlife trafficking and that appropriate penalties can be imposed for trafficking ;
    • improve international cooperation on enforcement through participation in international law enforcement operations, technical assistance and targeted financial support.

    3) Strengthening the global partnership of source, consumer and transit countries against wildlife trafficking:

    • take measures to step up funding to support developing countries in their efforts to combat wildlife trafficking;
    • use more efficiently the diplomatic tools of the EU and its Member States and other tools, notably EU trade policy, in relations with key source, transit and consumer countries and relevant regional organisations;
    • develop better tools to tackle the links between wildlife trafficking and security that exist in some regions;
    • use the existing multilateral processes, in international agreements and fora, to keep the issue on the global agenda.

    Monitoring and evaluation: the Action Plan covers the five years from 2016 to 2020. The Commission services and the EEAS will establish a scoreboard to monitor implementation. The Commission will report to the Council and the European Parliament by July 2018 on implementation of the action plan, Progress made and the success of the action plan in curbing wildlife trafficking will be evaluated in 2020. On that basis, the Commission will consider what further action is needed.

    The Action Plan will supersede Commission Recommendation No 2007/425/EC identifying a set of actions for the enforcement of Regulation (EC) No 338/97 on the protection of species of wild fauna and flora by regulating trade therein.

activities/1/committees/4/date
2016-05-24T00:00:00
activities/1/committees/4/rapporteur
  • group: GUE/NGL name: CHRYSOGONOS Kostas
committees/4/date
2016-05-24T00:00:00
committees/4/rapporteur
  • group: GUE/NGL name: CHRYSOGONOS Kostas
activities
  • date: 2016-02-26T00:00:00 docs: url: http://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/docs_autres_institutions/commission_europeenne/com/2016/0087/COM_COM(2016)0087_EN.pdf title: COM(2016)0087 type: Non-legislative basic document published celexid: CELEX:52016DC0087:EN type: Non-legislative basic document published body: EC commission: DG: url: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/environment/ title: Environment Commissioner: VELLA Karmenu
  • date: 2016-05-12T00:00:00 body: EP type: Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading committees: body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Development committee: DEVE body: EP responsible: True committee_full: Environment, Public Health and Food Safety committee: ENVI body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Internal Market and Consumer Protection committee: IMCO body: EP responsible: False committee_full: International Trade committee: INTA body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Legal Affairs committee: JURI body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Fisheries committee: PECH
committees
  • body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Development committee: DEVE
  • body: EP responsible: True committee_full: Environment, Public Health and Food Safety committee: ENVI
  • body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Internal Market and Consumer Protection committee: IMCO
  • body: EP responsible: False committee_full: International Trade committee: INTA
  • body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Legal Affairs committee: JURI
  • body: EP responsible: False committee_full: Fisheries committee: PECH
links
other
  • body: EC dg: url: http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/environment/ title: Environment commissioner: VELLA Karmenu
procedure
dossier_of_the_committee
ENVI/8/06475
reference
2016/2076(INI)
title
EU action plan against wildlife trafficking
legal_basis
Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament EP 052
stage_reached
Awaiting committee decision
subtype
Initiative
type
INI - Own-initiative procedure
subject