Southern Ocean Initiative: WWF - the Conservation Fund.
In November 2004, we joined forces with WWF- Australia to address the issues
of High Seas Governance and IUU (Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported) Fishing.
In a departure from the 'traditional' style of corporate sponsorship, the
partnership has taken a 'hands on' approach, with the two organisations working
closely together to develop and implement the program, utilising the
'science-based solutions' expertise of WWF, physically and financially
supported by Peregrine.
From humble beginnings, our project has gone global!
Spear-headed by our Australia-based project team, WWF established the Antarctica and Southern Ocean Initiative, focused on
conserving the endangered resources of the region and promoting sustainable
fisheries.
WWF offices around the world have now become directly involved, with an
initial injection of A$2 million from WWF UK over the next four years. WWF
International, USA and Canada will
also be directly engaged, and injecting additional funds.
The great difficulty in effecting conservation measures in the Southern
Ocean is the vast remoteness of the region and that it is not governed by any
one nation: many countries have claims or interests on the sea and its
resources, and much of it is classified as the "High Seas" and
therefore beyond the legislative reach of any individual country. In addition,
regulatory bodies such as Regional Fishing Management Organisations (RFMOs) do
not have the necessary 'teeth' to enforce the regulation or punishment.
The Southern Ocean Initiative will focus on working with key bodies such as
CCAMLR (Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources)
to define and declare a network of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) around the
Southern Ocean, which will protect critically sensitive and important areas of
biodiversity and in which commercial fishing will be prohibited.
The SOI strategy revolves around achieving a series of outcomes that
include:
* By 2012, a network of Marine Protected Areas to be gazetted covering at
least 10% of the 20 million square kilometre Southern Ocean
* By 2012, halting the impact of IUU Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported
fishing (one of the biggest threats to albatross) so that it is no longer a
significant threat to marine ecosystems
* By 2012, southern seabird populations will have stabilised and started to
recover.
These are clearly ambitious and long-term goals. However, the strategy for
achieving them is realistic and WWF has an impressive track record for
achieving similar objectives (such as with the Great Barrier Reef in Australia).
There are a number of milestones to be met along the way, for example, it's
expected that the first of the Marine Protected Areas will be declared by the
end of 2006, around the Prince
Edward Islands,
an important region for albatross conservation.
We have launched two projects so far under the umbrella of the Southern
Ocean Initiative:
Bioregionalisation of the Southern Ocean Workshop and Report
In
November, 2006, Peregrine Adventures and WWF-Australia released a
ground-breaking report that maps ecological zones across the entire Southern
Ocean for the first time. The report was produced by WWF-Australia and funded
by Peregrine. Leading scientists from around the world gathered in Hobart
in September to create the map, which forms part of the report entitled Bioregionalisation of the Southern Ocean.
It is the first time an entire ocean - representing about 10 per cent of the
world's ocean surface - has been mapped for its ecological zones.
The
report was launched to coincide with the 25th anniversary of the Commission for
the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources, (CCAMLR) at its
headquarters in Hobart.
The map will help scientists and conservationists better understand the
Southern Ocean so that we can address the major threats to its habitats and
wildlife, such as illegal fishing, climate change, and the impact of invasive
marine species.
The report will have important ramifications for how conservation issues will
be managed in the Southern Ocean and will provide a scientific foundation for
protecting sensitive Antarctic marine habitats and wildlife
Macquarie
Island
Feral Pest
Eradication Campaign
Peregrine and WWF-Australia win fro Macquarie Island
On June 4 2007, WWF-Australia and
Peregrine shared in an historic win for the environment. The Tasmanian Minister
for the Environment, the Hon Paula Wriedt, announced that the Tasmanian
Government would match the Australian
Commonwealth
Government’s offer to jointly fund a $24.6 million pest eradication program on World
Heritage-listed
Macquarie
Island.
The decision – and the subsequent
implementation of the plan - will essentially save Macquarie
Island
from irreversible environmental devastation and could save the endangered
grey-headed albatross from otherwise certain extinction in Australia.
It follows a sustained campaign, led by WWF Australia and Peregrine, to have
the eradication plan implemented as a long-term solution to the rabbit and
rodent problem that has plagued Macquarie
Island’s
fragile ecology for more than a century.
Following the eradication of cats on the
island the rabbit population exploded ten-fold to over 100,000. ‘Before and
after’ photographs reveal the grim result: the island’s lush tussock grasses
have been severely depleted, resulting in erosion and large landslips. Twenty
landslips occurred in September 2006 alone, killing hundreds of king penguins.
Macquarie Island,
1500km south of Australia,
is home to over four million seabirds and is one of the world’s most important
seabird nesting habitats. It provides haven for four threatened albatross
species including the only remaining Australian nesting site of grey-headed
albatrosses. Unless the rabbit plague is controlled, these albatrosses will
almost undoubtedly be driven to extinction in Australia.
So dire is the situation for the grey-headed albatross, that WWF recently
nominated it for up-listing from ‘vulnerable’ to ‘endangered’ under Australian
government environment laws.
Continuing our previous partnerships,
Peregrine joined with WWF-Australia to lobby the Tasmanian and Commonwealth
governments to fund the pest eradication program, which had been developed by
Tasmanian National Parks. Th e Plan was essentially developed in 2005 – its
implementation pending a funding agreement being finalised between the
Tasmanian and Commonwealth governments, each of which has a duty of care for
the island. Two years on, the Plan was still languishing for want of a funding
agreement, with a stalemate between the two governments over their respective
financial responsibilities.
Peregrine and WWF-Australia stepped in with
$100,000, raised through our on-board Save the Albatross auctions,
to kick-start key parts of the plan and to spur the governments into action.
Largely as a result of lobbying and a concerted media campaign, the two
governments were galvanized into action, with the final result being the June 4
announcement. If funding had not been forthcoming by the end of June, there
would not only have been further cost blow outs, but the Plan’s implementation
would have been delayed by another year… which could have been too late.
Glenyce Johnson, CEO of Peregrine, welcomed
the decision. “This will help to ensure a future for one of Australia’s
– and the worlds – most spectacular and environmentally significant island
habitats. As a responsible tourism operator, we could not stand by and
watch the destruction of Macquarie.
We’re proud to have played a part in this extraordinary outcome. The
partnership between WWF-Australia and Peregrine sets a precedent for
what can be achieved by environmental groups and tourism operators
working together.”
- For more information on the Macquarie Island situation click here or visit the ship-board blog of Andreas Glanznig,
WWF Senior Policy Officer, who is travelling to Macquarie Island
aboard the Aurora Australis to assess the environmental situation on
behalf of WWF
and Peregrine.
Download a fact sheet on Macquarie Island here.