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  • Subject Waste management - Oceania
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Voices of the Pacific Documentary
SPREP Publications, Waste Management and Pollution Control
Available Online
2025
In the expanse of the Pacific, where the rhythm of the tides has long danced with the vibrant cultures of the people who call its shores home, a crisis unfolds. The same currents that once carried food, knowledge and traditions now bring plastic, choking marine life, burying shorelines, and threatening a way of life that has endured for generations. Voices of the Pacific (COP) brings forward the voices of those at the heart of this crisis: community leaders, chiefs and everyday islanders confronting the daily realities of plastic pollution. The film paints a portrait of multigenerational island families spread across the Pacific, each facing struggles yet together firming a powerful reflection of the regions' ongoing fight. Through the eyes of children, who will one day become the custodians of these lands and waters, we hear the stories of their elders, the changes they have witnessed, and the uncertain future they now face. From the pristine shores of Fiji to the low-lying atolls of Kiribati and Tuvalu, we witness the far-reaching impact of plastic waste, much of it arriving from distant countries. As Pacific nations push for justice in the UN Plastic Treaty negotiations, their struggle becomes a rallying cry for the world, reminding us that the fate of the ocean is the fate of us all. This is not just a story of loss; it is story of hope, a celebration of culture, and a call to action. VOP challenges industries, policymakers and consumers to take responsibility and turn the tide on plastic pollution before it is too late.
Incorporating Climate Change Impacts Within Harvest Strategies: An Overview of Approaches
Biodiversity Conservation
Available Online

Bessell-Browne, Pia. et al.

2025
Ensuring that harvest strategies are robust to climate change is a top priority for many fisheries jurisdictions globally. This is because climate change is altering ecosystem structure and the productivity of marine species. We outline a range of approaches for incorporating climate change impacts within harvest strategies, including how a harvest strategy is specified and changes to monitoring requirements. Approaches evaluated include the use of extended stock assessments, multi-species and ecosystem models, revised management reference points, implementing regime shifts in model parameters, the provision of climate-sensitive catch advice, projections under alternative climate change scenarios and expanded use of management strategy evaluation. We evaluate the utility of these approaches against cost, data needs and uncertainty criteria; highlight key learnings from a range of global jurisdictions and demonstrate the broad array of options available outside of direct incorporation of climate variables within stock assessments. We identify approaches that have been successfully implemented and show that the most complex responses are not always the most successful. While there is no one-size-fits-all way to incorporate climate change within harvest strategies, we outline the need for flexible management arrangements. We also provide examples of approaches that have been successfully implemented, demonstrating that many of the most data-intensive responses will only be applicable in a few cases, necessitating the application of cheaper, less data-intensive approaches that are associated with greater uncertainty.