Various training and reference materials from the ACPMEA and Inform Joint Regional Meeting held at SPREP 17-21 September 2018.
Site locations of known Iniao (Pritchardia mitiarona) clusters on Mitiaro.
This dataset summarizes biodiversity data on plants, animals, marine and other biodiversity elements in Cook Islands.
This report looks at renewable electricity in the Cook Islands, and it was published in April 2011 by the Government's Renewable Energy Development Division.
This graph shows the average density of pomacentridae, labridae, acanthuridae, cirrhitidae for Mitiaro, Cook Islands.
This dataset contains information on samples from streams in Cook Islands from 2007-2013.
This dataset includes information on agricultural data, including crops, livestock and farming demographics, from national censuses and other sources.
This dataset contains information on water quality data, including streams, in various parts of the Cook Islands. Data range from 2008-2010.
CITES data for workshop
The data set provides a summary of Cook Islands fuel and LPG imported in the period 2013 - 2016. The Petroleum import data are measured in volumes (Litres, Tonnes, Kilograms etc.) and value in NZD currency.
The Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat’s wind and solar monitoring project is the main long-term data source for Rarotonga wind energy and is used to estimate wind regimes of other islands. At Ngatangila Point, Rarotonga, wind data recovery was 100% during two years of monitoring. The annual average wind speed was 5.5 m/s. The highest hourly and daily averages were 17.7 m/s and 14.0 m/s respectively.
Data on the Topographic and Bathymetric survey in Cook Islands to help identify coastal adaptation needs for Extreme weather events and Climate Change in Cook Islands.
Monthly Technical Report on energy services
Cook Islands National Water Policy
Development Projects for Cook Islands funded by ADB
Traditional Knowledge Act
A presentation by Imogen Pua Ingram (TE PA MATAIAPO) 2004 or older
Disasters, and therefore disaster response, in the Pacific are expected to be affected by climate change. This research addressed this issue, and focused on the immediate humanitarian needs following a disaster, drawing upon adaptive capacity as a concept to assess the resilience of individual organisations and the robustness of the broader system of disaster response..
Four case study countries (Fiji, Cook Islands, Vanuatu and Samoa) were chosen for deeper investigation of the range of issues present in the Pacific.