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Source: UNEP

Source: UNEP. Capturing Coral Reef & Related Ecosystem Services (CCRES). A GEF / World Bank Regional Project under the program Scaling Up Partnership Investments for Sustainable Development of the Large Marine Ecosystems of East Asia and their Coasts. CCRES Partners.

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Source: UNEP

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  1. Source: UNEP

  2. Capturing Coral Reef & Related Ecosystem Services (CCRES) A GEF / World Bank Regional Project under the program Scaling Up Partnership Investments for Sustainable Development of the Large Marine Ecosystems of East Asia and their Coasts

  3. CCRES Partners • Global Environment Facility • World Bank • The University of Queensland • The University of The Philippines • De La Salle University, Philippines • Cornell University • University of California Davis • Indonesian Universities –(TBC) • WWF-US and WWF-Indonesia • Currie Communications

  4. PROP: Pacific Island Regional OceanscapeProject & WB Climate Change Adaptation Strategies Coastal Resources for Sustainable Development COREMAP PRDP & WAVES PEMSEA

  5. Project Snapshot • Region • East Asia-Pacific (Philippines, Indonesia, Pacific Islands) • Duration • Five years • Effective date: 1 October 2013 • Closing date: 30 September 2018 • Current Financing ($10.4m) • Cash: US $4.5 m (GEF) & AUD $2.0 m (UQ) • In-Kind: $3.9 m • The University of Queensland • Project Executing Agency • Research Partner

  6. What will CCRES do? Mission: To engage government and coastal communities in bringing whole-of-system thinking to the design of local economies founded on a mutually reinforcing relationship between ecosystem health and economic performance This gives a material rationale for decision-makers to sustain coastal ecosystems and the locally-accrued benefits that they contribute to human wellbeing and prosperity

  7. What challenge is CCRES addressing? Discounting the future Limited understanding of trade-offs Lack of business acumen and innovation

  8. Challenge: • In coastal communities, local businesses frequently degrade the natural resources on which they rely • At the same time, alternative livelihoods schemes rarely succeed in becoming financially self-sustaining, often set up by those with little or no business expertise, making supply-driven products that do not consider demand or market access • Both problems stem from ignoring the value chain that extends from the natural resource, via the producer, all the way to the end-consumer.

  9. So CCRES: • Targets Investigations to quantify, model, clarify and map ES role & value and inform local communities (and Government) • Integrates ES information with business practices---assessed to strengthen those practices & their value chains from the resource base to the consumer • Targets communication & ownership—seeking +Δ in routine practice & behavior

  10. Project Components Dissemination & outreach C.3 Engaging, persuading, enabling Local Community and Government Norms, attitudes, policy Livelihoods, food security C.2 Integrating, securing, monetising Business Enterprises Environmental Impacts ± C.1 Natural Capital Measuring, valuing, mapping Ecosystem services

  11. Component I“Quantifying the value and market potential of coral reef and mangrove ecosystem services”Objective:To provide CCRES technical input on economic, social, natural and management science“Measuring, valuing and mapping”

  12. Measuring Ecosystem Services • Targeted Investigations fill information gaps on the roles that ES play in a specific community • Coastal protection • Fisheries • Tourism • Carbon sequestration

  13. Ecosystem Service Benefits: Effect of reef health on fisheries productivity “What is the value of a management action relative to cost?” Productive Degraded

  14. Why value ecosystem services? • National wealth accounts (alongside other forms of capital, e.g., minerals, human, agriculture) • Local stakeholders better understand how a change in ecosystem health affects their daily lives • Incorporate value into Marine Spatial Planning to improve benefits to people and reduce conflict

  15. Effects of governance on the flow of ecosystem service benefits “Who gets what, and why?”

  16. Reconciling trade-offs among ecosystem services “How do we get optimal outcomes for multiple objectives?” Marine Spatial Planning

  17. CCRES sites Philippines 1. Batangas 2. Visayas 3. Palawan (north/south) 1 2 3 4 Pacific? 5 Kiribati Solomons 3 1 2 Indonesia 1. Bali 2. Selayer 3. Wakatobi 4. Bird’s Head 5. Biak

  18. Component II “Forging community-led innovation in capturing and sustaining benefits from ecosystem service values and enhancing resilience in the face of climate change” Objective: To provide expertise in business innovation, management science and complex systems analysis “Integrating, balancingand securing”

  19. Regulating services Cultural services Complementarity …while reinforcing or maintaining these. Component II aims to build business that directly or indirectly utilise these… CO2 Direct sale Supporting services Provisioning services

  20. Activities • Understand current systems • Current & external businesses • Inventory “eco-businesses” • Business development • Assess existing & potential eco-business for triple bottom line performance • Decision Toolkit development

  21. Component III“Promoting behavioural change through outreach, decision support and regional learning”Objective: To provide expertise in communications, value systems, policy, engagement and outreach“Engaging, persuading, and enabling”

  22. Component III Integration • Survey development & application • Values analysis • Social network analysis • Policy and governance impact

  23. Next Steps • Approved by World Bank Board – September 2013 • Start date: 1 October, 2013 • Project Operating Manual & Implementation Plan • Procurement call for Implementation team & appoint team members • Commence implementation

  24. Melanie King, UQ Global Change Institutem.king4@uq.edu.au

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