Forest Buena Vista, Solomon Islands
Environmental Monitoring and Governance
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The Cook Islands, Niue, Solomon Islands, and Tonga have approved their national State of the Environment (SoE) reports, whilst for Papua New Guinea, the Minister for Environment Conservation and Climate Change has preapproved their report. The Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) the premier regional environment organisation in the Pacific assisted the countries in the development of the reports.

“One of SPREP’s core functions is to support our Pacific island member countries in developing their national State of Environment Reports, and working in partnership with them to implement their environment actions and decisions based on the SoE Report, said Mr Kosi Latu, Director General, SPREP. The five SoE report approvals in one year is a milestone achievement considering the current challenges and impacts of COVID-19. It clearly demonstrates Pacific island countries continued commitment and attention on the importance of environmental action, monitoring and reporting to support informed environmental planning and decision making at the national level.”

The SoE reports present an overview of the countries’ environments across seven thematic areas: Culture and Heritage; Atmosphere and Climate; Coastal and Marine; Freshwater Resources; Land; Biodiversity; and Built Environment. The reports use the Drivers, Pressures, State, Impact and Response (DPSIR) model to describe the environment, causal relationships, and environmental effects, based on quantitative data relating to the state of the environment, supplemented by stakeholder input.

The SoE reports highlight that all five countries have: decreased their import of ozone depleting substances; increased their percentage of protected areas; and increased their installation and generation of renewable energy. For instance, the 2-megawatt Matatoa Solar Farm in Tonga, commissioned in October 2017 and consisting of 7,440 solar panels, is expected to generate more than 2.8 million kilowatts of electricity during its first year of operation. 

Commenting on his country’s 2019 SoE report, Mr Haden Talagi, Director of the Department of Environment, Ministry of Natural Resources, Niue, highlighted it as “a valuable resource that allows us to conduct effective environmental planning and decision making,” helping to “bring about a bluer and greener Niue as we forge ahead to a ‘new normal.’”

The SoE reports also provide “an effective system” for reporting against national priorities, including reporting on international and regional commitments under the SDGs, the Paris Agreement on climate change, the SIDS Accelerated Modalities of Action  (SAMOA) Pathway, and the Noumea Convention for the Protection of Natural Resources and Environment of the South Pacific Region and Related Protocols on ensuring sound environmental management and development of natural resources. [IISD Knowledge Hub Sources] [SPREP News Story] [Cook Islands State of the Environment Report] [Niue Environment Data Portal] [Papua New Guinea State of the Environment Report] [Solomon Islands State of the Environment Report] [Tonga State of the Environment Report] [Pacific Environment Portal]

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This story was made possible with funding support from the Government of Sweden through the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and was developed with the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) using the Pacific Environment Portal, which enables users to find, access, and use regional and national data. The portal has been developed by the regional UNEP-GEF Inform project executed by SPREP, which has established national environment data portals in 14 Pacific island countries to help address the challenges of storing and accessing data. The online database of information and datasets aims to help improve decision making and reporting on the environment. 

You can read the original story in this link.

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