Reef Futures Looking Up! Large Scale Coral Reef Restoration is Possible
BALI, Indonesia, Aug. 30, 2018 /CNW/ -- Needing to change our visual and professional perspective was the common theme behind several promising low-cost technical solutions reviewed at a recent Coral Reef Restoration Workshop. The workshop sponsored by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Mars, Inc. and Paul G. Allen Philanthropies, convened a unique multi-disciplinary coalition of scientists, NGOs, coral restoration practitioners, Government and business, in Bali, Indonesia. Its aim was to identify promising evidence-based standards to scale coral restoration efforts globally.
"Investment and insurance industries are crying out for these evidence-based standards to enable coral reef restoration," said IUCN's Carl Gustaf Lundin. "These deceptively simple solutions aim to rebuild the overall coral reef ecosystem. The coral reef restoration system developed by Mars, Inc. - building a "coral spider" framework - offers a unique way to provide structural stability which enables the whole reef ecosystem (corals, invertebrates and fish) to return. Life which you can hear… which is what is so exciting. An increasing body of scientific research points to sound as a proxy for coral reef health which is an easily measurable outcome."
"Reef restoration is an exciting new collaboration between humans and many thousands of marine species. To maximize success, we have imagined being the corals, the parrot fish, and the shrimp, to understand the reefs from their perspective and needs. To rebuild reefs, we need to move beyond growing and planting coral for our needs - looking down - and start to think like a fish and look up," said Professor Steve Simpson of the University of Exeter, a workshop participant.
"Paul Allen believes saving coral reefs from climate change is a critical challenge facing the world and scaling reef restoration will be a vital tool," said James Deutsch of Vulcan Inc. "This workshop advanced the science and economics of reef restoration, showing scale is possible if we combine diverse disciplines."
The workshop was opened by Dr. Ir. Safri Burhanuddin from the Coordinating Ministry of Maritime Affairs, Republic of Indonesia, who led a small Indonesian contingency of scientists and government officials. Said Frank Mars of Mars, Inc., "Indonesia's grand challenge for how healthy coral reefs could become a key attraction for increasing the Indonesian tourism industry was inspiring. I feel confident that if we combine all the right people from across the world and work collaboratively, we can rise to meet and deliver against these specific challenges for Indonesia, and perhaps the rest of the world's reefs."
Following the workshop, a subset of the participants continued on to Makassar, Sulawesi to dive on and provide a peer review of Mars's coral reef restoration system. Continued Mr. Mars, "With the Indonesian government's support, Mars has been actively working since 2011 to develop a scalable system, which anyone properly trained could use to restore rubble areas within most coral reefs around the world." The peer review feedback following the dive across the three hectares of restored reef of Makassar was best summed up by Professor David Smith of the University of Essex and who works extensively in Indonesia. "Wow! In my thirty years of diving I don't remember when I saw such levels of coral cover. Seeing coral cover like that really resets the ecological baseline. Many of us may have to change our view on what we thought was a high-quality reef. I came away inspired and with a new sense of hope for reefs worldwide."
It is intended that outcomes from the workshop will be assembled and published in the future, as well as included in conversations to be held during the Our Oceans Conference to be held in Bali at the end of October 2018.
About Mars, Incorporated
Mars is a family-owned business with more than a century of history making diverse products and offering services for people and the pets people love. With more than $35 billion in sales, the company is a global business that produces some of the world's best-loved brands: M&M's®, SNICKERS®, TWIX®, MILKY WAY®, DOVE®, PEDIGREE®, ROYAL CANIN®, WHISKAS®, EXTRA®, ORBIT®, 5™, SKITTLES®, UNCLE BEN'S®, MARS DRINKS and COCOAVIA®. Mars also provides veterinary health services that include BANFIELD®Pet Hospitals, Blue Pearl®, VCA® and Pet Partners™. Headquartered in McLean, VA, Mars operates in more than 80 countries. The Mars Five Principles – Quality, Responsibility, Mutuality, Efficiency and Freedom – inspire its more than 100,000 Associates to create value for all its partners and deliver growth they are proud of every day.
For more information about Mars, please visit www.mars.com. Join us on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram and YouTube.
About IUCN
IUCN is a membership Union composed of both government and civil society organizations. It harnesses the experience, resources and reach of its more than 1,300 Member organizations and the input of more than 13,000 experts. This year, IUCN celebrates its 70th anniversary. Since its establishment in 1948 in the French town of Fontainebleau, IUCN has become the global authority on the status of the natural world and the measures needed to safeguard it. www.iucn.org
About Paul G. Allen Philanthropies
Paul G. Allen Philanthropies is a key part of Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Paul G. Allen's commitment to improving our planet through catalytic philanthropy, inspirational experiences, and scientific and technological breakthroughs. Empowered by Paul's vision to create a better world, we take an unconventional approach to tackling hard problems by integrating technology, data, policy, and powerful storytelling to drive positive change in our community and around the globe. http://www.pgaphilanthropies.org
SOURCE Mars, Incorporated
Arie Nauvel Iskandar, Corporate Affairs Director, Mars Symbioscience Indonesia, Tel: +62 8114117804, Email: [email protected], http://www.mars.com
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