Dates: 20-22 August 2024
Venue: CCI Ivato, Antananarivo, Madagascar
Nairobi Convention COP 11 landing page
The eleventh Nairobi Convention Conference of Parties (NC COP 11) will be organized in two main segments: a partners, experts and national Focal Points meeting for first two days, and a Heads of Delegation meeting on the 3rd day. At the Heads of Delegation meeting, Contracting Parties will review the implementation of the Convention’s Work Programme for 2022 – 2024, review and approve the proposed 2025 – 2028 Work Programme and budget and deliberate on decisions.
The Government of Madagascar will host NC COP 11 as the current Chair of the Bureau to take stock of progress made since the 10th COP which was held virtually in November 2021 due to the COVID pandemic. A lot has been achieved during the intersessional period focusing on different complementary themes addressing the triple planetary crises of biodiversity loss, pollution and waste, and climate change. The ongoing amendments to the ‘Biodiversity’ Protocol; development of a Regional Ocean Governance Strategy; a regional information management strategy; completion of a toolkit for Green Port Development for Blue Economy, *progressive development of an ecosystem indicator monitoring framework, strengthened strategic partnerships; and investments in regional capacity building such as marine spatial planning and, marine protected areas, information management, and many others in different domains relevant to the broad mandate of the Convention.
NC COP 11 is being held against a backdrop of major global policy developments including the adoption of the High Seas Treaty, Kunming-Montreal Biodiversity Framework, the Decade of Ocean Science and the Decade of Ecosystem Restoration among others. A new regional integrated programme and nested to it, a new Work Programme has been developed, to build on the current (2022-2024) Work Programme and also ensure linkages to these emerging global policy developments.
The Conference of Parties (COP) of the Nairobi Convention for the protection, management and development of the coastal and marine environment of the Western Indian Ocean is the highest decision-making organ of the Convention where regional conservation measures, enabling policies, management options, strategies and sustainable development pathways are agreed upon for the continued implementation of the Convention and its Protocols.