Latest Report Identifies Serious Threats to Coral Reefs in Solomon Islands

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BY ALEX DADAMU

CORAL reefs are of crucial importance for food security and rural livelihoods in the archipelago. Logging is a major, yet often overlooked, a threat to coral reefs in the country, according to a 2020 report on Coral Reef Conservation in the Solomon Islands.

The report entitled – ‘Coral reef conservation in the Solomon Islands: Overcoming the policy implementation gap’ was recently made available by World Fish – a Wildlife Conservation Society and Locally Managed Marine Area network on January 19, 2021; this year.

The policy gap analysis report identifies threats to coral reefs, evaluates the effectiveness of the existing legal framework to address these threats, and formulates recommendations to strengthen community-based natural resource management in Solomon Islands.

“Large-scale logging operations cause massive erosion, which has a detrimental effect on water quality.

“The shipping accidents, oil pollution, and uncontrolled construction of log ponds associated with the logging industry also have a significant impact on coastal ecosystems,” the analysis stated.

The report revealed that over fishing is particularly problematic on narrow fringe reefs in densely populated areas, such as the northwest coast of Malaita and the west coast of Guadalcanal.

Nonetheless, the report analysis identifies that coral reefs in the Solomon Islands remain in fairly good condition and seem relatively resilient to global climate change impacts.

Furthermore, the report stated that the existing legal framework is in principle adequate to address current threats to coral reefs. The key challenge is to enforce these laws on the ground.

“But provincial governments, which play a pivotal role in implementing environmental legislation, remain structurally under-resourced.

“Civil society organizations, government agencies, and donors are actively promoting community-based resource management (CBRM), and substantial efforts have been made over the past 20 years to build an enabling policy framework to support conservation action at the grassroots level.

“However, these initiatives have little impact on wider development trajectories in the country,” the analysis revealed.

The ‘Overcoming the policy implementation gap’ analysis reported that in most cases, customary authorities are unable to address supra-local threats, such as logging induced sedimentation, shipping accidents, or the harvesting of marine resources for export markets.

“Only government agencies can effectively address these threats.

New investments to conserve coral reefs should therefore primarily focus on the following:

• Strengthen the enforcement of existing environmental legislation, for example by ensuring adequate operational budgets and by enabling legal action against environmental crime, fraud, and corruption.

• Provide essential information to improve CBRM, for example by disseminating awareness materials to coastal communities, and by developing paralegal referral systems to report and respond to violations of environmental legislation.

• Mainstream environmental conservation in rural development programs, for example by building a broad civil society coalition to campaign for structural reforms of the logging industry.


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