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Sunday, May 25, 2025

Managing our most important resource: The Caribbean Sea

by

20151209

A World Wildlife Fund re­port re­leased April this year con­ser­v­a­tive­ly val­ued world ocean as­sets at US$24 tril­lion–with an ex­tra US$2.5 tril­lion a year from the goods and ser­vices we get from coastal and ma­rine en­vi­ron­ments. Our patch of the ocean, the Caribbean Sea, has not been eval­u­at­ed in this way, but there is no doubt it sus­tains life here in many cru­cial ways. We swim, surf and play in it, we har­vest seafood from it, and many peo­ple earn a liv­ing di­rect­ly or in­di­rect­ly from it, in­clud­ing fish­er­folk, tour op­er­a­tors, scu­ba dive busi­ness­es, restau­rants and beach ho­tel own­ers.

World­wide, seas and oceans pro­vide food, clean air, a sta­ble cli­mate, trans­port and en­er­gy. We of­ten take the val­ue our own Caribbean Sea very much for grant­ed, as­sum­ing its boun­ty will al­ways be there for us. But this is sim­ply not the case.

Al­though the greater Caribbean re­gion's coral reefs, man­grove forests and sea­grass mead­ows pro­vide im­por­tant feed­ing and breed­ing grounds for more than 1,300 species of fish, for ma­rine mam­mals and for six sea tur­tle species, these ar­eas are un­der threat from over­fish­ing, hu­man pol­lu­tion, warm­ing tem­per­a­tures, in­va­sive species, and de­struc­tive, poor­ly planned hu­man coastal de­vel­op­ments. This is ac­cord­ing to many or­gan­i­sa­tions, in­clud­ing NAM­PAM (the North Amer­i­can Re­gion­al Pro­tect­ed Ar­eas Net­work), the World Wildlife Fund, and the UK-based Glob­al Ocean Com­mis­sion (GOC). As a re­sult, in the Caribbean, many tur­tle species are en­dan­gered, many high val­ue grouper and conch fish­eries have col­lapsed and coral reefs are un­der stress, with some species suf­fer­ing de­clines of more than 90 per cent, says NAM­PAM.

The fact is that we are fail­ing to man­age this in­valu­able re­source in any co­or­di­nat­ed way–cyn­ics might ar­gue we're fail­ing to man­age it at all. And we're not unique in this: the GOC, formed in 2013, not­ed on its web­site: "No sin­gle body shoul­ders re­spon­si­bil­i­ty for ocean health, and an ab­sence of ac­count­abil­i­ty is char­ac­terised by blind ex­ploita­tion of re­sources and a wil­ful lack of care"–all of which has led to a cy­cle of glob­al ocean de­cline.

Can the cy­cle be re­versed?

The Caribbean Sea Com­mis­sion

In the Caribbean, this may just be pos­si­ble–if the As­so­ci­a­tion of Caribbean States (ACS) achieves an im­pact. The ACS is a re­gion­al body which aims to cre­ate re­al co-op­er­a­tion on se­lect­ed com­mon is­sues across some 25 coun­tries in the re­gion, from the Yu­catan penin­su­la to the Guianas, all linked by the Caribbean Sea. And the ACS's most re­cent ini­tia­tive, an in­ter­na­tion­al re­search meet­ing on No­vem­ber 23-24 of the Caribbean Sea Com­mis­sion, hopes to en­cour­age a more co­or­di­nat­ed, in­tel­li­gent sea pol­i­cy across all 25 mem­ber na­tions.

This is an am­bi­tious task in­deed. Ex­act­ly how chal­leng­ing is it for so many Caribbean coun­tries to co­op­er­ate on any sin­gle is­sue?

"I think that is the great chal­lenge of Caribbean his­to­ry," said Am­bas­sador Al­fon­so M�nera, Sec­re­tary Gen­er­al of the As­so­ci­a­tion of Caribbean States (ACS), last Fri­day.

But bet­ter re­gion­al co­op­er­a­tion is es­sen­tial, he be­lieves, es­pe­cial­ly now, giv­en the re­al­i­ty of cli­mate change and the threats this presents. Shar­ing re­gion­al best prac­tices is key to our sur­vival in a rapid­ly chang­ing en­vi­ron­ment, he said.

Am­bas­sador M�nera is from Colom­bia, a coun­try with a huge range of ecosys­tems and a rich­ly di­verse cul­ture, more than 46.7 mil­lion peo­ple live there. M�nera grad­u­at­ed in law and po­lit­i­cal sci­ence from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Carta­ge­na in 1981. He earned a doc­tor­ate in Latin Amer­i­can and US his­to­ry in 1995 from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Con­necti­cut, and has been a vis­it­ing aca­d­e­m­ic at many uni­ver­si­ties. He was the Colom­bian am­bas­sador in Ja­maica for five years (1999-2003) and be­came Sec­re­tary Gen­er­al of the ACS in April 2012 for a four-year term.

His ACS role in­volves diplo­mat­ic func­tions across the re­gion, help­ing to strength­en in­sti­tu­tion­al re­la­tion­ships and pro­mote ACS work.

M�nera said the re­cent Caribbean Sea Com­mis­sion sym­po­sium at­tract­ed 26 in­ter­na­tion­al or­gan­i­sa­tions, diplo­mats from 19 coun­tries, and sci­en­tif­ic ex­perts from 18 coun­tries.

"For the first time, we pulled to­geth­er ex­perts from all over the Greater Caribbean; from the is­lands and from the con­ti­nen­tal Caribbean... and the lev­el of dis­cus­sion was very high," said M�nera.

The sym­po­sium was unique for the wide num­ber of par­tic­i­pants: Span­ish, French and Eng­lish-speak­ing ex­perts for the first time were shar­ing their re­search in an ef­fort to find com­mon so­lu­tions.

Am­bas­sador M�nera said some prob­lems are be­com­ing ur­gent, un­der­min­ing the tourist in­dus­tries which so many Caribbean coun­tries de­pend on. Sar­gas­sum sea­weed out­breaks, for in­stance, choked many beach­es this year, while li­on­fish are qui­et­ly wip­ing out oth­er ma­rine life forms and dis­rupt­ing del­i­cate coral reef ecosys­tems through­out the en­tire re­gion–these fish out-breed, out-com­pete and out-live lo­cal fish species, un­der­min­ing food se­cu­ri­ty. Mean­while, many beach­es in the re­gion are sim­ply be­ing erod­ed away.

A key rec­om­men­da­tion from the sym­po­sium was a sim­ple, but fun­da­men­tal one: our re­searchers and pol­i­cy­mak­ers across the re­gion need to co­op­er­ate, and do this bet­ter, more of­ten, more ef­fec­tive­ly, and more quick­ly. The sym­po­sium rec­om­mend­ed ac­tive re­gion­al re­search col­lab­o­ra­tion in more sys­tem­at­ic, struc­tured ways. Many in­di­vid­ual coun­tries are al­ready do­ing ex­cel­lent re­search; but it hap­pens in iso­lat­ed pools; the re­search isn't shared, so we don't have the big pic­ture, which would in­form co­or­di­nat­ed sea poli­cies. One such ap­proach, for in­stance, would be to col­lec­tive­ly man­age the Caribbean Sea as a sin­gle Large Ma­rine Ecosys­tem, some­thing we do not do right now.

"No one coun­try can deal with these top­ics alone, es­pe­cial­ly small coun­tries, which don't have the re­sources to deal with these kinds of threats. Just think how much mon­ey Mex­i­co spent try­ing to con­trol Sar­gas­sum sea­weed on its Caribbean coasts–about US$9.1 mil­lion. And there is great un­cer­tain­ty–no one can pre­dict what will hap­pen next year, which coun­tries will be af­fect­ed, and how bad­ly," said M�nera.

Munera said the re­al­ly big chal­lenge is for our ex­perts and lead­ers from dif­fer­ent coun­tries to sim­ply get to­geth­er. He's talk­ing about the po­lit­i­cal will to co­op­er­ate.

"We don't have this tra­di­tion of work­ing to­geth­er, and we have to build it. What we are now try­ing to build, af­ter cen­turies of frag­men­ta­tion, is this new ex­pe­ri­ence of work­ing to­geth­er." He ad­mits the chal­lenge of col­lab­o­ra­tion across so many coun­tries in the re­gion re­mains sig­nif­i­cant–but not im­pos­si­ble.

Re­gion­al re­search net­works

The re­cent Caribbean Sea Sym­po­sium is an ex­am­ple of the progress which can be made, he says. Par­tic­i­pants now want to es­tab­lish con­sis­tent, cen­tralised mech­a­nisms to col­lect and dis­sem­i­nate re­search, and the ACS Sec­re­tari­at plans to set up a data­bank for this. The Caribbean Sea Com­mis­sion may be­come a cen­tral co­or­di­nat­ing agency; one of its key tasks will be to present best prac­tices and rec­om­men­da­tions to gov­ern­men­tal pol­i­cy­mak­ers. France has come on board, vol­un­teer­ing to de­vel­op a project on the sus­tain­abil­i­ty of the Caribbean Sea, as well as host a con­fer­ence on the Caribbean Sea next year in Guade­loupe. And the ACS Sec­re­tari­at, and the CSC, will be re­port­ing to the next an­nu­al ACS Min­is­te­r­i­al Coun­cil Meet­ing in Haiti in Jan­u­ary 2016, hop­ing to in­clude pri­or­i­ty, achiev­able rec­om­men­da­tions in next year's ACS ac­tion plan, to be pre­sent­ed at the Heads of States ACS sum­mit in Ha­vana, Cu­ba in 2016.

The CSC, mean­while, has not been idle. The Com­mis­sion has been lob­by­ing to get the Unit­ed Na­tions to de­clare the en­tire Caribbean Sea as a pro­tect­ed area, says M�nera. But that is a long process. He says we need to first clar­i­fy terms–what the lim­its of "pro­tect­ed area" means, for in­stance.

"We need to start build­ing this con­sen­sus, and cul­ture, and net­work," em­pha­sis­es M�nera: "We need to make it clear for every Caribbean coun­try that the Caribbean Sea is our most im­por­tant col­lec­tive as­set and nat­ur­al her­itage. We need to pro­tect it. Not just be­cause we are a ro­man­tic peo­ple who want to pro­tect it, but be­cause of prag­mat­ic, fun­da­men­tal rea­sons–we get food from the Caribbean Sea, our tourism in­dus­try is in­ti­mate­ly re­lat­ed to the Caribbean Sea; even our sur­vival as a peo­ple de­pends on the sus­tain­abil­i­ty of the Caribbean Sea."

And the end goal? To have de­ci­sion mak­ers un­der­stand the im­pli­ca­tions of the best avail­able sci­ence, and trans­late this to co­or­di­nat­ed poli­cies to bet­ter man­age coastal zones and ma­rine re­sources.

We, in the Caribbean, are among the most vul­ner­a­ble to cli­mate change im­pacts, notes M�nera. So we need to act soon. We can't just wait to see what the big pow­ers at the cli­mate change talks in Paris de­cide, says M�nera; we need to act to­geth­er, in our own re­gion, for our own in­ter­ests.

More in­fo

?What is the As­so­ci­a­tion of Caribbean States?

The As­so­ci­a­tion of Caribbean States (ACS) be­gan in 1994 to pro­mote co­op­er­a­tive ac­tion among its mem­bers on se­lect­ed is­sues. The ACS rep­re­sents 280 mil­lion peo­ple cen­tered on the Caribbean Sea, span­ning is­lands and main­land states. It in­cludes Span­ish, French, Dutch and Eng­lish-speak­ing cit­i­zens, from tiny is­lands like St Lu­cia to large con­ti­nen­tal South Amer­i­can na­tions with Caribbean coast­lines. It is the most in­clu­sive of many re­gion­al group­ings.

The group works by con­sen­sus. It fo­cus­es on four main ar­eas: de­vel­op­ing re­gion­al trade, re­gion­al trans­port, sus­tain­able tourism and dis­as­ter risk re­duc­tion. Its oth­er ar­eas of in­ter­est are cul­ture, sci­ence and tech­nol­o­gy, and the Caribbean Sea Com­mis­sion.

The ACS in­cludes 25 Mem­ber States and sev­en As­so­ciate Mem­bers. The main groups of mem­bers are: CARI­COM coun­tries, the Group of Three (Colom­bia, Venezuela and Mex­i­co), Cen­tral Amer­i­ca (Cos­ta Ri­ca, El Sal­vador, Guatemala, Hon­duras and Nicaragua), the non-grouped mem­bers (Cu­ba, Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic, Pana­ma) and the As­so­ciate Mem­bers of French and Dutch ter­ri­to­ries.


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