DEFINITION : Quantity of generated hazardous wastes processed/treated (including export)
PURPOSE : Treatment and safe storage of hazardous waste mitigates the risk to humans and nature. Hazardous materials can have direct and indirect, chronic or acute impacts
DESIRED OUTCOME : Full treatment/processing of all hazardous waste generated
DEFINITION : % of households connected to central sewerage system
PURPOSE : Tracks progress in managing sewage in a way that minimises the risk of water contamination. Untreated sewage and leaking septic systems are a major source of ground and surface water contamination
DESIRED OUTCOME : Positive trend in % of households connected to central sewerage system
In this report, a set of recommendations is provided for each indicator to support the next best steps for management action that will advance progress towards the target outcome and support Pacific people and biodiversity.
Date: Wednesday 28th April 2021
Attendance:
1. Mr. Vatumaraga Molisa - Chair and representative for Melanesia Sub Region (Vanuatu)
2. Ms. Sailele Aimaasu – Representative for Polynesian Sub region (Samoa)
3. Ms. Nenenteiti Teariki-Ruatu – Representative for Micronesia Sub Region (Kiribati)
4. Mr. Paul Anderson – PMU, Secretariat
5. Mr. Jochem Zoetelief – UNEP Task Manager
6. Ms. Sabrina Reupena – SPREP
Reports baseline surveys used to monitor Rarotonga's Fringing Reef
Report prepared by Stephen Lyon for the Environment Service, Tu’anga Taporoporo, Cook Islands. Reports on fringing reef survey
Data presented in this survey provides a snap-shot of present conditions around Rarotonga, however time series data obtained from continuous monitoring of all fore reef and lagoon sites may enable us to identify changes at the community level that may be related to land based activities. Multi-Dimensional Scaling analyses of fore reef corals and fish (by trophic level) between windward and leeward exposures indicated differences between groups.
Impacts of 2015-2016 El Nino event in the Northern Cook Islands.
From 28 July – 9 August 2013, a research team consisting of individuals from the Office of the Prime Minister of the Cook Islands, Te Ipukarea Society, Oceans 5, Pacific Islands Conservation Initiative, Cook Islands National Environment Service, and local volunteers travelled aboard the vessel Plan B of the Waitt Institute to conduct a rapid marine assessment of the fore reefs of the islands of Aitutaki, Manuae, Mitiaro, Takutea, and Atiu in the southern Cook Islands –– for the purpose of assessing the health of coral reefs within the proposed Cook Islands Marine Park.
Although coral reef monitoring has been on-going for around 20 years on Rarotonga, it has been
inconsistent in terms of methodology, intervals between surveys, data collectors, and also the government
ministries involved. The first monitoring was undertaken by the National Environment Service in 1994 (Miller et al., 1994), and subsequent monitoring by the Ministry of Marine Resources in 1999 (Ponia et al., 1999), then the National Environment Service in 2000 (Lyon, 2000), 2003 (Lyon, 2003), 2006 (Rongo et al., 2006), and 2009
An interdisciplinary journal on the toxins derived from animals, plants and mircoogranisms
Rarotonga Fore Reef Community Survey 2009
Marine survey analysis for the proposed cruise ship landing jetty site in Arorangi 2011
Cook Islands National Environment Service Technical report
A published paper on the effects of natural disturbances, reef state, and herbivorous fish densities on ciguatera poisoning in Rarotonga, southern Cook Islands