Global Gathering Advances Ocean Protection at Scale


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Our Big Ocean

HONOLULU – Last Week, Big Ocean and the Blue Nature Alliance Hosted the 2022 Ocean Managers XCHANGE at Camp Mokulē'ia on the North Shore of Oʻahu, Hawaiʻi

The convening brought together 38 marine managers and practitioners from 16 countries working to collectively protect more than 8 million square kilometers of ocean. Participants spent the week sharing lived experiences to cultivate knowledge, capacity, and authentic relationships on behalf of the marine areas and communities they work to protect.  

“Supporting peer learning between and amongst marine managers working at scale is a core activity for Big Ocean, but with a six- or seven-fold increase in the number of sites since our establishment in 2010, reimagining how we design convenings is essential,” said Big Ocean Director Naiʻa Lewis. “Our partnership with the Alliance increases our capacity to better leverage the expertise within our network to benefit the broader field.”

For the Blue Nature Alliance’s XCHANGE co-lead, Lihla Noori, the event provided an opportunity to share and capture insights from new and veteran protected areas managers that could significantly benefit the field of marine management in the years to come. 

“Ensuring marine management capacity development programs are durable and inclusive is critical to effectively protecting 30% of the world’s ocean by 2030,” Noori said. “In the coming weeks, we look forward to amplifying the shared lessons that emerged from the XCHANGE so that marine managers around the world can learn from those best practices.”

On the heels of COVID-19 and in preparation for IMPAC5, the XCHANGE seeded relationships vital to peer learning and fostered networking among those who are leading on-the-ground ocean conservation and governance efforts globally. Conveners hope connections built during the XCHANGE will increase momentum toward shared commitments to expand marine protection by 2030.

The Blue Nature Alliance plans to seek future opportunities that build upon this inaugural gathering. “It’s critical to cultivate a self-sustaining support system for managers of large-scale marine areas to ensure that conservation work is effective long term,” said Laure Katz, co-lead of the Blue Nature Alliance. “We must expand the capacity of marine management teams and coastal communities to match the scope and scale of the challenge to heal our oceans for future generations.”

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Uluwehi Chung

Honolulu, Hawaii

Big Ocean is the only peer-learning network created ‘by managers for managers’ (and managers in the making) of large-scale marine areas. Since its inception in 2010, our network has grown from six to 17 sites. Members are the large-scale MPAs as represented by their management teams. Our focus is management and best practice, which is vital to the future of the field. Our goal is to grow the field of large-scale MPAs. Our purpose is to develop and enhance the professional standards of practice, and long-term, effective management of large-scale marine areas.
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Joanie Coker

Washington, DC

The Blue Nature Alliance is a collaboration led by Conservation International, The Pew Charitable Trusts, the Global Environment Facility, Minderoo Foundation, and the Rob and Melani Walton Foundation to catalyze the conservation of 18 million square kilometers of the ocean (7 million square miles) by 2025. Through creating a global network of partners dedicated to building on lessons learned from well-functioning marine protected areas and innovating new approaches to conserving large ocean areas, the Alliance aims to expand and enhance ocean conservation with a focus on working alongside Indigenous peoples and local communities, scientists and academics, and other partners.
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