Blue
economy for marine resource development
Indroyono Soesilo ; The director
for fisheries and aquaculture resources use and conservation at the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) in Rome
|
JAKARTA
POST, 20 Maret 2014
|
Indonesia,
in collaboration with the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations (FAO), will soon start implementing the blue economy concept in East
Lombok and Central Lombok regencies in the province of West Nusa Tenggara
(NTB). An integrated, upstream and downstream development program covering
tuna fisheries, aquaculture, marine tourism, salt industry, pearl industry,
ecosystem services with eco-friendly sustainable energy and other
infrastructure, including a capacity-building program, is being pushed
forward to begin this year, and is scheduled to be completed by 2018, ready
to be showcased to the world.
The
Lombok Blue Economy Implementation Program is expected to create 77,700 new
jobs and to generate income of Rp 1.3 trillion (US$114.88 million) per year.
As the
world’s largest archipelagic nation, with more than 17,400 islands, 5.9
million square kilometers of territorial water and its exclusive economic
zone and an 81,000-kilometer-long coastline, Indonesia has gained recognition
as a strong promoter of the blue economy concept. At the Blue Economy Summit
in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, in January 2014, Indonesia’s presentation
on the blue economy concept received a very positive reception. Seychelles
President James Alix Michel welcomed the Indonesian initiative presented by
Indonesia’s maritime affairs and fisheries minister, Sharif Cicip Sutardjo,
and supported Indonesia’s leadership in this endeavor.
Indonesia’s
blue economy implementation should be showcased to the world as the world
prepares the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the Post-2015 UN
Development Agenda. The world is charting the sustainable ocean of 2015-2030
and beyond in order to answer a particularly pressing global challenge: how
to feed its 9 billion population in 2050.
The
world is embracing the blue economy concept, which has gained great interest
in international forums, such as the RIO+20 in 2012, the Asia Conference on
Oceans, Food Security and Blue Growth in Bali in 2013, and likely at the
forthcoming Global Oceans Action Summit for Food Security and Blue Growth in
The Hague (April 2014), and as part of the SDG process.
It has
also become key in the development strategies of international organizations,
like the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the
United Nations Environment Program (UNEP), the World Bank, the FAO, the
European Union as well as many individual nations, developed and developing,
including the Small Island Developing States (SIDS).
The
rationale is that three-quarters of the Earth’s surface is covered by oceans
and seas, which are both an engine for global economic growth and a key
source of food security.
Global
ocean economic activity is estimated to be between $3 trillion and $5
trillion, contributing to the world economy in many important ways, such as
the significant fact that 90 percent of global trade moves by marine
transportation. Fisheries and aquaculture provide 4.3 billion people with
more than 15 percent of annual consumption of animal protein. Over 30 percent
of global oil and gas produced is extracted from offshore sites.
Expanding
knowledge on marine biodiversity has provided breakthrough advances in
sectors such as pharmaceuticals, food production and aquaculture. Over 3.1
billion of the world’s population lives within 100 kilometers of the ocean or
sea in about 150 coastal and island nations. “Blue-green economy” increases
overall wealth of a nation while producing a higher gross domestic product
(GDP) growth rate.
Leaders
from the 23 economies of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum,
declared in Bali in October 2013 that they would pursue “cross-sectoral work
under the APEC Initiative on Mainstreaming Ocean-related Issues, including
those in line with priorities outlined by our ocean-related ministers, that
will maintain the health and sustainability of our oceans and coastal
resources for the benefit of food security, poverty eradication, preservation
of traditional culture and knowledge, conservation of biodiversity and
facilitation of trade and investment”. This declaration is in line with the
blue economy approach.
The FAO
embraces the blue economy concept in the Global Initiative on Blue Growth in
support of food security, poverty alleviation and the sustainable management
of aquatic resources. The initiative will be a cross-cutting global activity
that will have global, regional and national impact on increasing food
security, improving nutrition, reducing poverty of coastal and riparian
communities and supporting the sustainable management of aquatic resources,
including through participatory processes and actions to improve
implementation at local levels.
The FAO
Global Blue Growth Initiative gained the interest of delegates from 42
countries gathered in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, on March 10-14 this year, at the
32nd session of the FAO’s Asia-Pacific Regional Conference, and has been
adopted as one of the conference’s results.
The
United Nations Open Working Group (UNOWG), established in January 2013, has
been tasked with steering the proposal on the SDGs Post-2015 agenda, ready
for adoption at the 2015 UN General Assembly.
Following
deliberations and discussions, from March 2013 to February 2014, UNOWG
identified 19 focus areas for in-depth consultations, one of which related to
marine resources, oceans and seas. This focus area will concentrate on the
conservation and sustainable use of marine resources, oceans and seas to
ensure the provision of economic and social benefits and ecosystem services
to humankind.
Some
measures that could be considered include reducing marine pollution and
debris, including from land-based activities; halting the destruction of
marine habitats, including ocean acidification; promoting the sustainable
exploitation of marine resources; regulating the harvesting of straddling
fish stocks; addressing illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing and
destructive fishing practices; eliminating harmful subsidies; ensuring the
full implementation of regional and international regimes governing oceans
and seas, and establishing marine protected areas (MPAs).
It is
high time for Indonesia to take a leading role during the next negotiating
period of the post-2015 development agenda on SDGs and bring up the
importance of marine, sea and ocean resources with its blue economy concept
at the table.
Our Earth, its people and its bloodstream, the oceans, should be
managed in a sustainable way for the generations to come. ●
|
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar