[Coral-List] Phoenix Islands Protected Area Dissolved and Opened to Fishing!

Austin Bowden-Kerby abowdenkerby at gmail.com
Sun Nov 14 03:27:37 UTC 2021


This news is greatly disturbing.
https://www.1news.co.nz/2021/11/11/fears-over-chinas-involvement-in-kiribatis-ditching-of-marine-reserve/

Such a horrific shame for the nation of Kiribati to give up the fight to
save the planet- and at such a critical time in history.
Has the island nation most impacted by coral bleaching and sea level rise
now been forced to sell its very soul to the devil?

Is this desperation the result of a failure by the international community
to provide the required support?  Certainly none of he big NGOs has a
significant presence in the nation, and my own experience indicates that
the nation has been written off by the major funding sources for climate
change adaptation and for coral reefs.

Will the money obtained from selling off the fishing rights now be used to
meet the needs of the meek and kind people of Kiribati, many of whom
already suffer from degraded resources and chronic ciguatera poisoning due
to the death of their coral reefs from climate change?

The waves are rising, but the government leaders appear to be resigned to
drowning.

I am in shock.

Austin

Austin Bowden-Kerby, PhD
Corals for Conservation
P.O. Box 4649 Samabula, Fiji Islands
https://www.corals4conservation.org
https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/emergency-response-to-massive-coral-bleaching/
<https://www.globalgiving.org/projects/emergency-response-to-massive-coral-bleaching/>








On Sat, Nov 13, 2021 at 7:34 AM Liz Fairey - NOAA Federal via Coral-List <
coral-list at coral.aoml.noaa.gov> wrote:

> The NOAA announces the NOAA Ruth Gates Coral Restoration Innovation Grant
> competition for Fiscal Year 2022
>
> Who: This competitive program provides cooperative agreements to
> institutions of higher education; non-profits; commercial (for profit)
> organizations; and U.S. territories and state, local, and Native American
> tribal governments.
>
> Where: The aim of the NOAA Ruth Gates Coral Restoration Innovation Grant
> competition is to improve the success of shallow water (<30 m [<100 ft]
> depth) coral reef restoration in an increasingly variable climate.
> Applicants must be U.S. based, but may have international partners. All
> U.S. funded in-water activities must take place within the U.S. coral
> jurisdictions: American Samoa, the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana
> Islands, Florida, Guam, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, or the U.S. Virgin Islands.
>
> Program Priorities: The principal objective of this grant program is to
> move coral intervention science towards field application in order to
> increase coral survivorship and promote resilient, genetically diverse, and
> reproductively viable coral populations. Proposed projects must align with
> goals and objectives of the CRCP Strategic Plan
> <https://www.coris.noaa.gov/activities/strategic_plan2018/> and/or action
> items in the NOAA Action Plan on Coral Interventions
> <
> https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/resource/document/noaa-action-plan-coral-interventions
> >.
> NOAA has identified the following two priority areas for this funding
> announcement: 1.) Research, develop, and advance the application of
> innovative intervention techniques that support the persistence of corals
> and improve coral survivorship by enhancing coral resilience to threats,
> such as ocean warming or coral disease; and  2.) Research and develop
> methods to improve the survivorship of post larval propagation.
>
> Funding Amount: NOAA anticipates typical federal funding for awards will
> range from $100,000-$250,000/year for a total $100,000 to $750,000 over one
> to three years. NOAA will not accept proposals with a federal funding
> request of less than $100,000 or more than $1,000,000 total over three
> years. Applicants must provide a 1:1 match of non-Federal funds or must
> submit a request to NOAA to waive the matching requirement if the applicant
> can demonstrate 1) no reasonable means are available through which an
> applicant can meet the matching requirement, and 2) the probable benefit of
> the project outweighs the public interest in such matching requirement.
>
> How: Applicants must apply through www.grants.gov.
>
> When: Applications need to be submitted through www.grants.gov by 11:59 PM
> Eastern Time on February 23, 2022. Due to the COVID-19 situation and NOAA
> staff telework status, paper format applications delivered at our physical
> address will NOT be accepted for this FY 22-24 application cycle.
>
> Interested applicants may obtain the full Federal Funding Opportunity
> announcement by visiting www.grants.gov, clicking on the “Search Grants,
> tab” and searching by funding opportunity number
> (NOAA-NMFS-HCPO-2022-2007121) or by CFDA number (11.482).
>
> If you need further information, please contact me (liz.fairey at noaa.gov
> ).--
> Liz Fairey (she/her)
> NMFS Office of Habitat Conservation
> NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program
> 1315 East West Hwy
> Silver Spring, MD 20910
> 301-427-8632
> _______________________________________________
> Coral-List mailing list
> Coral-List at coral.aoml.noaa.gov
> https://coral.aoml.noaa.gov/mailman/listinfo/coral-list


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