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Plan d'action pour les recifs coralliens du Pacifique 2021-2030
SPREP Publications, Biodiversity Conservation
Available Online
Davies, Peter
,
Toki, Beth
2021
La région a besoin d’un plan d’actions pour prendre des décisions concertées en vue d’améliorer la santé et la résilience des récifs coralliens. Cela doit permettre aux dirigeants des îles du Pacifique, aux gestionnaires des récifs coralliens et aux communautés locales de coordonner leurs efforts de protection de ces précieux écosystèmes. La coopération régionale peut optimiser les synergies entre différents programmes pour parvenir à de meilleurs résultats, par exemple en partageant les connaissances et en tirant parti des économies d’échelle. Un Plan régional peut également servir de base à la mobilisation des ressources financières nécessaires pour la protection et la gestion des récifs coralliens.
oceania
action plan
coral reef
Pacific Coral Reef Action Plan 2021-2030
SPREP Publications, Biodiversity Conservation
Available Online
Davies, Peter
,
Toki, Beth
2021
The region needs an action plan to make cohesive decisions that will benefit coral reefs. This will enable leaders of Pacific Island countries, coral-reef managers and community members to coordinate their efforts to protect these valuable ecosystems. Regional cooperation can optimise synergies between programmes and actions to achieve better outcomes, by sharing knowledge and using economies of scale. A regional plan can also provide the basis for securing the funds needed to protect and manage coral reefs.
pacific
oceania
coral reefs
action plan
SOPAC country profile : Cook islands
Available Online
SOPAC
2011
The Cook Islands comprises 15 islands with a total land area of 237 sq km and a maximum height above sea-level of 652 m. The islands are scattered over an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of 1.8 million sq km; one of the largest EEZs in the South Pacific.
cook islands
2010 PACC Cook Geospatial Framework SOPAC Proposal
Climate Change Resilience
Available Online
SOPAC
2010
This proposal has been prepared by the Ocean and Islands Programme (OIP) within the Pacific Islands Applied Geoscience Commission (SOPAC) in collaboration with the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA). It has been prepared in response to an invitation1 from the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) to assist the Cook Islands in deriving coastal related information to underpin and inform climate change adaptation decisions for coastal areas of Mangaia Island.
SOPAC member countries national capacity assessments: tsunami warning and mitigation systems : Samoa, Tuvalu, Niue, PNG, Cook Islands, Fiji, Solomon Islands, FSM, Palau, Nauru, Tonga, Kiribati, Marshall Islands & Vanuatu
Climate Change Resilience
Available Online
SOPAC
2009
samoa
solomon islands
tonga
vanuatu
palau
cook islands
fiji
kiribati
nauru
niue
tuvalu
Samoa Technical Report - Economic Analysis of Flood Risk Reduction Measure for the Lower Vaisigano Catchment Area
Biodiversity Conservation
Available Online
SOPAC
2008
Flooding imposes significant costs on households and businesses located in the lower Vaisigano catchment area. SOPAC, under the European Development Fund (EDF) project Reducing Vulnerability of Pacific ACP States, has worked with the Government of Samoa to develop the Samoa Flood Management and Action Plan, which identifies actions for government agencies, the private sector, NGOs and communities responsible for flood and floodplain management that can assist in reducing flood risks in Samoa, particularly in the lower Vaisigano catchment area located in Apia, which is subject to frequent flooding.
samoa
National integrated water resource management diagnostic report : Niue - Sustainable Integrated Water Resources and Wastewater Management in Pacific Island Countries
Available Online
SOPAC
2007
The Government of Niue (GoN) is restructuring its Public Service which is a timely opportunity to integrate water management functions adopting the IWRM approach and principles in lieu of the current sectoral approach adopted over the last 3-4 decades. This will be an opportunity to integrate NGOs, civil society and all stakeholders in the process of water and wastewater management. The strengthening of the national capacity will enhance efficiency to deliver the required services by the public institutions, but also the awareness of the community on the sustainable use of water as a finite natural resource.
pacific
oceania
niue
waste management
National integrated water resource management diagnostic report : Vanuatu - Sustainable Integrated Water Resources and Wastewater Management in Pacific Island Countries - Vol.1|Integrated water resource management : Diagnostic report Vol.2 - Appendices
Biodiversity Conservation
Available Online
SOPAC
2007
These goals are a big challenge to small Pacific Islands Countries with their small land masses, remote locations and small but rapidly growing populations making them vulnerable. Vanuatu shares these and other challenges to sustainable development. In Vanuatu real GDP per capita is still lower than in the 1980s, infrastructure is poorly developed, the population is rapidly growing at 2.6% per year, water resources are declining and in many places contaminated, and household water supplies are inadequate or absent. The country's capital and human resources are stretched and a better forward is needed.
pacific
oceania
vanuatu
waste management
National integrated water resource management diagnostic report : Samoa - Sustainable Integrated Water Resources and Wastewater Management in Pacific Island Countries
Biodiversity Conservation
Available Online
SOPAC
2007
The economic and social wellbeing of Pacific Island Countries are dependent upon the quality and quantity of their freshwater. Constrained by their relative small size, natural vulnerability, and limited human and financial resource base, Pacific Small Island Developing States face specific challenges to effectively manage their water resources.
samoa
pacific
oceania
waste management
National integrated water resource management diagnostic report : Solomon Islands - Sustainable Integrated Water Resources and Wastewater Management in Pacific Island Countries
Biodiversity Conservation
Available Online
SOPAC
2007
The Solomon Islands is characterised by scattered islands that vary considerably in size, physical and hydrologic characteristics. The types of islands range from high volcanic to tiny low coral atolls. The higher islands have river systems whilst the low coral atolls have no natural surface water systems and are completely dependent upon rainwater catchments and groundwater.
pacific
oceania
solomon islands
waste management
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