Generic Integrated Environmental Management for Biosphere Reserves
Abstract
Biosphere reserves are protected terrestrial and coastal environments of international
conservation importance. They are unique categories of protected areas combining
both conservation and sustainable use of natural resources in a great variety of
ecosystems, geographic conditions and socio-cultural settings. Sustainable
management of a biosphere reserve should combines biological, social and financial
aspects. This is a difficult challenge and implies an understanding of interactions
within a complex biological and economic system combined with the successful
negotiation of lasting compromises between a wide variety of stakeholders with
diverse interests. Although the Seville Strategy, Agenda 21 and the Convention on
Biological Diversity highlights priorities for the development of biosphere reserves
(including implementation indicators), a huge gap exists regarding management
guidelines and appropriate standards. An Environmental Management System
framework will be an appropriate tool to bridge this gap.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether it is possible to apply the ISO
14001 principles to the Biosphere Reserve Concept to develop a generic
Environmental Management System framework. This :framework will combine the
goals and objectives of the Seville Strategy, which affirms the nature and purpose of
biosphere reserves, with the objectives of the specific biosphere reserve.
The goals and objectives from the Seville Strategy· were evaluated against the
elements of the ISO 14001 Environmental Management System, with the aid of a
Leopold matrix, to determine which goals and objectives and ISO elements are most
needed at national and local reserve level. Seven of the eleven objectives from the
Seville Strategy are regarded as very important, three as important and one as less
important on national and local reserve level. Nine of the seventeen ISO elements are
regarded as very important, four as important and four as less important.
The very important and important objectives from the Seville Strategy have been
incorporated into the very important and important ISO elements to develop a generic
Environmental Management System Framework that can serve as a guideline
document for the compilation of an environmental management system for biosphere
reserves.