Coral
triangle ratification needs Indonesia’s leadership
Alan T White and Abdul Halim ;
Alan T. White is a senior scientist of the Indo-Pacific
division at The Nature Conservancy (TNC);
Abdul Halim is senior marine policy advisor of
the Indonesian Program at TNC
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JAKARTA
POST, 14 Maret 2014
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The
six-country Coral Triangle Initiative created to ensure the survival of one
of the most critical coastal and marine habitats on earth is at a decisive
moment. The Indonesian government, as both the brainchild of the Coral
Triangle Initiative on Coral Reefs Fisheries and Food Security (CTI-CFF) and
the leader of its interim secretariat, should push forward on formal
establishment of the institution before political will and funds run out.
After
seven years in the making, the world is looking to the six countries —
Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands
and Timor Leste — to cement their commitment through the May 2014 launch of
the permanent CTI-CFF Secretariat. The lives and livelihoods within the Coral
Triangle region depend on a multi-national approach to reverse the imminent
collapse of this incredibly important and severely threatened shared coastal
and marine resource. As the largest of the CTI-CFF countries and most
populous, Indonesia’s leadership at this moment is crucial.
Stretching
across marine waters that bridge the natural resources of the Pacific and
Indian Oceans and their related seas, the Coral Triangle is recognized as the
global center of marine diversity. It is home to more than 600 species of coral
(over 75 percent of the global total), more than 3,000 species of reef fishes
(almost 40 percent of the global diversity), six out of seven marine turtle
species, over 30 percent of the world’s coral reef area (17 percent are
within Indonesian waters), and the largest extent of mangrove forests in the
world.
More
than 130 million people in the six countries depend directly on these fish
and marine resources as their principal source of income, food and
livelihoods. But these resources are under significant and increasing threat,
with more than 85 percent threatened by overfishing, destructive fishing,
watershed-based pollution and the impacts of coastal development. When the
influence of rising sea temperatures is combined with these local threats, the
portion of coral reefs rated as threatened increases to more than 90 percent.
In
response to these threats and in recognition of the incredible value of
natural marine resources at risk, in May 2009, the governments of Indonesia,
Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Solomon Islands and Timor Leste
signed the Coral Triangle Initiative Declaration on Coral Reefs, Fisheries
and Food Security (CTI-CFF). The CTI-CFF is a multilateral partnership that
aims to safeguard the marine and coastal resources of the Coral Triangle
region. The six Coral Triangle countries collectively adopted a regional plan
of action, followed by each country’s adoption of a national plan of action.
More
than US$200 million in multiyear grants has been committed by various international
donor agencies to directly support implementation of the Coral Triangle
Initiative, and each Coral Triangle country has substantially increased its
own national investments in coastal and marine resources management.
For
example, Indonesia has mandated the 3.3 million hectare Savu Sea National
Marine Park, the largest in the Coral Triangle region and has instituted a
process to review and improve the effectiveness of all of its marine
protected areas. The Philippines has budgeted for a major national coral reef
restoration program, Malaysia is progressing to gazette its largest marine
protected area to date located in Sabah which will utilize state-of-the-art
design criteria, Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands have both scaled up
their national marine resources management programs through improved
legislation and capacity building at the local scale, and Timor Leste is
actively beginning implementation and community engagement in its one large
marine protected area.
But the
six Coral Triangle countries must still ratify the CTI-CFF agreement which
will authorize the operation of a permanent regional secretariat and
establish the CTI-CFF as a permanent program, to coordinate the enhanced
protection and stewardship of the coastal resources and well-being of coastal
communities in the region.
The
ratification is not yet done and several key actions are pending which must
be accomplished in the next two months, because the official launch of the
CTI-CFF Permanent Secretariat it scheduled for mid-May in Manado. Of the six
countries, only Malaysia has ratified the CTI-CFF agreement in 2013 and the
other five countries, including Indonesia, are still completing the
ratification procedures.
The
initiative has attracted support from members of the G8 and global and
regional bodies. Today, the core CTI-CFF partners include the United States,
Australia, the Asian Development Bank, the United Nations Development
Program, the Global Environment Facility, international NGOs — The Nature
Conservancy, World Wildlife Fund, Conservation International — and the Coral
Triangle Center. These partners believe that it is critical for the
ratification to be accomplished very soon to ensure that the investment of
the last five years by all concerned is not jeopardized.
In the
case of Indonesia, it was President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono who initiated
and led the CTI-CFF process in the margin of the UN Convention on Climate
Change meetings in Bali in 2007. Then in May 2009, Indonesia hosted the six
Presidents of each CTI-CFF country in Manado to endorse the CTI-CFF regional
plan of action. Indonesia also contributed the time and expertise of key
staff in the Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Ministry to assist in guiding the
CTI-CFF activities since 2009.
We
strongly encourage the government to sign for ratification of the document
soon. This action will once again show the true leadership of Indonesia and
President Yudhoyono of the CTI-CFF, which will encourage the other countries
to follow so that the Permanent CTI-CFF Secretariat can be formalized in May
in Manado on the fifth anniversary of the CTI-CFF launch. ●
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