Both ENDS at the UN Ocean Conference: voicing our environmental justice concerns about the “Blue Economy”
Next week, the United Nations Ocean Conference will take place in Nice, France. This conference is focused on the conservation and sustainable use of coasts, seas and marine resources. Both ENDS colleague Murtah Shannon will be attending. We’ve asked him to explain a bit more about his plans.
Why is this conference important for Both ENDS and our partners?
Together with our local partners we have been supporting the rights, livelihoods and tenure security of coastal communities for years in various countries - such as Brazil, Senegal, Mozambique, Bangladesh, the Maldives, the Philippines and Indonesia - with a particular focus on communities facing the harmful impacts of large-scale infrastructure development, marine dredging and fossil-fuel extractivism.
Recently, debates about ocean policy – also known as the “Blue Economy” – have been emerging. However, we have noticed that these debates up to now are largely blind to the human rights and environmental justice concerns that our partners are face on a daily basis. The UN Ocean conference provides an important international platform to have these concerns heard.
Both ENDS rarely attends conferences like this on our own. So who is coming with you this time?
I will be attending the conference with representatives from Kalikasan People's Network in the Philippines, the national federation of small-scale fisherfolk of the Philippines PAMALAKAYA, WALHI South Sulawesi in Indonesia and the Save Maldives Campaign in the Maldives with whom we have been working closely on the environmental and human rights impacts of large-scale land reclamation and marine sand mining.
Do you have any concrete plans already? What are you going to do?
We are co-organizing a side-event with the UNEP GRID-Geneva titled Extracting the Future: A conversation on marine sand, ocean justice and resilience. In this event we’ll be discussing the drivers and social and environmental impacts of large-scale land reclamation and marine sand mining in Indonesia, the Philippines and the Maldives. It will take place on Friday the 13th at 14:45. I invite everyone to secure their seat at our event!
More broadly we aim to expand our network and to advocate for a stronger voice of coastal communities and grassroots organizations in global ocean policy making.
When would you consider this conference successful?
There is a growing number of academics, civil society organizations and policy makers who are deeply concerned about the human rights and environmental justice implications of the Blue Economy, but the links within and between these groups are often limited. I will consider the conference to be successful if it contributes to a stronger consolidation of this progressive movement. We will certainly be doing our utmost to support this process at the conference.
For more information
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