Litcius/Paper detail

Consensus decision-making in CCAMLR: Achilles’ heel or fundamental to its success?

Lynda Goldsworthy

2022International Environmental Agreements Politics Law and Economics36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Commission for the Convention on the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources is the body responsible for the conservation and management of most species in the Southern Ocean. The Convention mandates that decisions be made by consensus agreement of its Members. This approach has been largely successful in delivering strong management decisions across both complex issues and widely ranging national interests. However, recent failures to progress the implementation of a network of marine protected areas or to agree any concrete response actions to climate impacts raise concerns about its effectiveness. This paper reviews the level of uptake of Member-driven proposals and then examines examples of proposals that were not resolved within the usual three years to analyse the processes utilised by Members to find resolution. It concludes that CCAMLR has been successful in reaching agreements when focusing on fisheries management but less so on issues within its broader conservation mandate, such as area protection for biodiversity purposes or non-fishery management focused scientific study, or for issues that are perceiv ed to extend the competency of the Convention. It notes that CCAMLR lacks operational mechanisms to facilitate agreement in the absence of compromise text or when one or two Members cannot accept a proposal.

Topics & Concepts

MandateConvention on Biological DiversityCompromiseCommissionConventionBusinessMarine protected areaUncertaintyMarine conservationEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental planningPolitical sciencePublic relationsBiodiversityLawEcologyEconomicsGeographyBiologyFinanceStatisticsMathematicsHabitatCoastal and Marine ManagementInternational Maritime Law IssuesArctic and Russian Policy Studies