Presentación Oficial del Estudio de la OCDE; “Océano sostenible para todos: Aprovechar los beneficios de las economías oceánicas sostenibles para los países en desarrollo”. Traducido al español y presentado por Restore Coral y Mares Naturalia.
#UNWOD2021 El tema de este año del UN World Oceans Day es “El Océano: Vida y Medios de Vida”
Acompáñanos en la presentación del reporte en español de la OCDE: “Océano sostenible para todos: Aprovechar los Beneficios de las Economías Oceánicas Sostenibles para los Países en Desarrollo”. Traducido al español y presentado por Restore Coral y Naturalia.
Con la distinguida participación de múltiples especialistas y representantes de organizaciones como el Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo, La Cooperación Andina de Fomento, Massachussett Institute of Technology, el proyecto INVICTUS, el UN WTO y el Sistema de Monitoreo Espacial Aquosmic, compartirán sus perspectivas en diferentes áreas de la Economía Azul Sostenible.
Participan:
Jorge Moreira da Silva
Director de Cooperación para el Desarrollo de la OCDE
Rodolfo Lacy
Director de Medio Ambiente de la OCDE
Roberto Martinez Yllescas
Director del Centro de la OCDE en México para América Latina
Roberto Cerda
Director del Capitulo de Mares de Naturalia
Marcel Julien Medina-Mora
Cofundador de Restore Coral
Liliana Bailet
Vicepresidenta de la fundación Ara Macao.
Salomón Diaz
Especialista en Planeación Espacial Marina
Ricardo Michel Reyes
Consultor técnico de infraestructuras de datos para aplicaciones de inteligencia artificial CAF; Banco de Desarrollo de América Latina.
Dr. Michele Stua, PhD
Consultor en Política y Gobernanza del Cambio Climático
Dr. Anton Vila, PhD
Especialista en Bioprospección de recursos genéticos acuáticos
Dr. Santiago Bucaram, PhD
Especialista Sectorial – Recursos Naturales del BID
Ing. Luis Gilberto Murillo
Exministro de Ambiente y Desarrollo Sostenible de Colombia, Martin Luther King, Jr. Visiting Scholar, MIT
Natalia Bayona
Directora de Innovación, Educación e Inversión para Organización Mundial del Turismo (UNWTO).
Image Credit: https://www.restorecoral.org/estudiooceanoparatodosocde
Celebrate #WorldOceansDay with us! Join us in his webinar about sharks and mantas in Mexico, with current and former students of Pelagios Kakunjá, and learn about the research we carry out!
Jueves 10 de junio
4:00 P.M. La Paz / 5:00 P.M. CDMX
Facebook Live: @pelagioska
Image Credit: https://www.instagram.com/p/CP4k1TrhAfr/
On World Ocean Day (8th June 2021), countries from all four corners of the world – from India to Guyana, South Korea to Austria have pledged to support the ‘30 by 30’ commitment which is being championed by the UK-led Global Ocean Alliance and the High Ambition Coalition for Nature and People, co-chaired by the UK, Costa Rica and France.
This next milestone follows a successful meeting of the G7 Climate and Environment ministers, during which all members agreed to champion the global ‘30×30’ target to conserve or protect at least 30 percent of the world’s land and at least 30 percent of the world’s ocean by 2030, as well as committing to ‘30 x 30’ domestically.
Members of the Global Ocean Alliance and/or the High Ambition Coalition for Nature and People
- The 80 countries now supporting the 30by30 target in the ocean are: Angola, Benin, Botswana, Cabo Verde, Chad, Cote D’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia , Gabon, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Kenya, Mauritania, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Republic of Congo, Rwanda, Senegal, Seychelles, Togo, Uganda, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, Belize, Grenada, St Kitts and Nevis, Mongolia, Jordan, Pakistan, UAE, Australia, Fiji, Marshall Islands, Palau, Vanuatu, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Maldives, India, Japan, South Korea, Armenia, Austria, Belgium, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, EC, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Monaco, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Romania , Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and United Kingdom.
“Océano sostenible para todos: Aprovechar los beneficios
de las economías oceánicas sostenibles para los países en desarrollo”.
Traducido al español y presentado por Restore Coral y Mares Naturalia
Key Note Speakers:
Jorge Moreira da Silva
Director de Cooperación para el Desarrollo de la OCDE
Rodolfo Lacy
Director de Medio Ambiente de la OCDE
Roberto Martinez Yllescas
Director del Centro de la OCDE en México para América Latina
Con la participación de:
Roberto Cerda Zuñiga, Director del Capítulo de Mares de Naturalia
Marcel Julien Medina-Mora
Co-fundador Restore Coral
Además de múltiples especialistas y representantes de organizaciones como el
Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo, La Cooperación Andina de Fomento, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, el proyecto INVICTUS, el UN WTO y el Sistema de Monitoreo Espacial Aquosmic,
compartirán sus perspectivas en diferentes áreas de la Economía Azul Sostenible.
Evento en Español.
Link de Registro:
https://bit.ly/3gehjM0
Image Credit: https://us12.campaign-archive.com/?e=[UNIQID]&u=a4f335b03382c13e41f044dcb&id=c743fca01d
Esta video serie destaca las historias y los principales temas relacionados con los océanos y las organizaciones sociales y comunidades de pueblos originarios cuyo sustento es el océano y la biodiversidad costera intrínsecamente ligada a él, así como también, iniciativas de restauración y propuestas de emprendimientos basados en una economía azul circular.
Participan:
-Gerardo Carreón, Naturalia, Isla Tiburón, Sonora. Director de Conservación.
Actualmente trabajando en comunidades de pueblos originarios del Noroeste. Trabajamos con la comunidad Comca’ac (Seri) de Punta Chueca.
-Osmar Sanmiguel, Kilometro Uno, Tijuana.
Amantes y protectores del océano, apasionados de la sostenibilidad y la innovación social. Fieles creyentes de la capacidad de la juventud para crear e inspirar cambio.
-Ocean. Vanessa Gomez, PiPartner Group, Colima.
Una Economía Azul Circular para un océano sostenible. El océano es el principal medio de sustento de más de 3 000 millones de personas en todo el mundo y es un sistema de soporte vital clave para toda la vida en este planeta.
-Dana Zapata, Hotel MIA Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo.
Nuestros mares y océanos son de los ecosistemas más desconocidos e importantes que tenemos. Según la UNESCO cubren el 71% del mundo, pero hasta la fecha, solo el 7% de los mares están protegidos y solo el 2.7% gozan de las máximas protecciones.
-Juliana Acero, Centro de Investigación Takata en Mahahual.
Creemos en un mundo más justo, donde las actividades humanas no tengan un impacto negativo en la naturaleza. Este mundo y esta generación están listos para un cambio que implica una nueva forma saludable de interactuar con nuestro planeta. Nuestros esfuerzos y acciones colectivos buscan proteger y restaurar los ecosistemas costeros de Mahahual. Creemos que cada uno de nosotros debe aspirar a contribuir a crear un futuro sano y sostenible.
– Delphine Kachadourian, Mar…es de México, Fundación Santa Lucía, CDMX. “Lo que no conoces no proteges”, Bajo esta premisa nace Mar…es de México. – María Teresa Morfín, proyecto “Redes al Viento” (Veracruz). Desarrollado con y para la cooperativa de pescadores del Puerto Antón Lizardo. El proyecto tiene como objetivo preservar a los ecosistemas, al mejorar la vida de los pescadores y campesinos, y retirarlos de prácticas de pesca y de cultivos nocivos para el medio ambiente. Esto se puede hacer a través de procesos educativos, acompañando a los pescadores y campesinos en la constitución de empresas nacientes, en rubros relacionados con la vida en el mar o en el campo, de preferencia, orientándolos al turismo regenerativo.
– Inti Escalona, MAR… ES DE MÉXICO, Oaxaca. El proyecto Zapotengo en la comunidad ´´La Lagartija´´, Municipio de Pochutla, Oaxaca, se lleva a cabo en un inicio, en una propiedad de 42 has, adquirida para la protección de la selva caducifolia y la flor y fauna del sitio.
– Presentación del trabajo Fotográfico de Fernando Cordero. Fotógrafo profesional dedicado a la fotografía artística durante 40 años.
Oceanography in Mexico is based mainly in how we can respond to the question stated in the title of this conference. In this review we will try to define other core aspects for our country, such as: What types of monitoring can be done and what their ranges and limitations are? What is the main focus of the actual systems of observation and what is left to be observed? What contributions do the new observation platforms make? This is a conference organized on behalf of the initiative for the United Nations World Oceans Day. The conversation will be livestreamed, in Spanish, through CICESE’s Facebook fan page, on Wednesday, the 11th of June. (www.facebook.com/CICESE)
Panelists
Sharon Herzka Llona – CICESE
Jorge Zavala Hidalgo – CCA UNAM
Enric Pallàs Sánz – CICESE
Tomás Salgado Jiménez – CIDESI
Armando Jaramillo Legarreta – CNANP SEMARNAT
TIME
11:00 a.m. Baja California (PST/GMT-7)
13:00 p.m. Mexico City (GMT-5)
Image Credit: https://www.facebook.com/events/187076696647306?acontext=%7B%22event_action_history%22%3A[%7B%22surface%22%3A%22page%22%7D]%7D
The project of a new research center will be presented. Centro de Investigaciones Oceánicas del Mar de Cortés (CIOMC) will be an institution associated with the new Aquarium of Mazatlán. With 4 Programs and several research lines, the CIOMC will focus on generating knowledge, creating alliances and proposing strategies to deal with environmental and social issues related to the ocean.
An intention letter will be singed for collaboration with other research institutions. In this gesture of goodwill will participate: Dr. Adreissa Páez-Michel, Public Communication of Science Director, representing the CIOMC; Dr. Jorge Róbinson-Mendoza, Director of the Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología (UNAM) and Dr. Pablo Wong-González, Director of Centro de Investigación en Alimentación y Desarrollo.
Closing the event, there will be a Conference about the World Oceans Day and the United Nations Decade of Oceans Science for Sustainable Development 2021-2030. Our speaker will be Dr. Elva Escobar Briones, Professor in oceanography at Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, UNAM.
Image Credit: https://unworldoceansday.org/calendar/
Multi-stakeholder forum for fishers and industry to present their commitment towards sustainable fishing. During the forum, participants will present their collective action efforts developed in favor of fisheries and oceans sustainability as well as their goals for the near future. Collective action is fundamental for sustainable oceans.
Compromisos públicos por una pesca sostenible
Foro de múltiples partes interesadas para que pescadores y pescadoras, y la industria, presenten su compromiso con la pesca sostenible. Durante el foro, los participantes presentarán sus esfuerzos de acción colectiva desarrollados a favor de la sostenibilidad de la pesca y los océanos, así como sus objetivos para el futuro cercano. La acción colectiva es fundamental para los océanos sostenibles.
Jun 9, 2021 10:30 AM inMexico City
Image Credit: https://unworldoceansday.org/calendar/
The general panel goal is to make visible the challenges and areas of opportunity to incorporate the gender perspective in fisheries and aquaculture of Latin America and the Caribbean.
Introduction
For the past twenty years, there has been talking of gender studies and their links to fisheries. This topic has gained greater interest since 2015 with the arrival of international instruments such as the Sustainable Development Goals and the approval of the Voluntary Guidelines to achieve the sustainability of small-scale fisheries, incorporating the gender equality as a key component of blue justice to achieving sustainability.
Several years after the emergence of these global efforts to promote gender equality, What are the main findings in the Latin American and Caribbean region? The Gender equality at sea panel aims to make visible the challenges and opportunities to incorporate gender perspective in marine conservation and sustainable fisheries and aquaculture in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Link Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6495938191
Image Credit: https://unworldoceansday.org/calendar/
Billions of people rely on seafood as their primary source of protein, most of it caught by the 180 million people working in small-scale fisheries worldwide. Climate change, overfishing, and pollution threaten ocean ecosystems and coastal communities alike. Globally, solving for these complex problems is estimated to require $1.75 trillion by 2030. Fragmented and uncoordinated marine conservation efforts that focus on a few silver bullets (e.g., MPAs, rights-based fisheries management) often overlook the people who are on the ocean, adapting their lives to fish every day – small-scale fishers.
Innovación Azul is a social enterprise, based on a platform cooperative that is owned by fishers, fishing groups, NGOs, and other stakeholders in the ocean conservation community, facilitating collaboration, and providing a digital infrastructure for small-scale fishers in Latin America, and the Caribbean. Innovación Azul, and its beachhead app PescaData, provide a web-based enterprise dashboard for fishing cooperatives and organizations, business operation tools for fishers, a marketplace for goods, services and ideas and mechanisms to measure all stakeholders’ contributions to international goals such as the SDGs and FAO´s Voluntary Guidelines for Securing Sustainable Small-Scale Fisheries.
Join us to discuss how to create scalable change and move Latin America fisheries towards sustainability and create resilient coastal communities.
Link Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/9550690393
Image Credit: https://unworldoceansday.org/events/innovacion-azul-scaling-solutions-for-small-scale-fishers/
#RestoreCoral will convene a series of youtube videos called “MAR Day (Mesoamerican Reef Day): Resilience & Development” on March 10, 2021 on www.mar-day.org & restore coral’s youtube channel starting at 9am (GMT-6), as a celebration of the Mesoamerican Reef with the goals of: *Highlighting the Ocean Life of the area and the current resilience efforts *Highlighting the Mayan Coastal Communities that have being affected by the degradation of the ecosystem, the COVID Economical Crisis and the Coastal Development *Showcasing Innovations for sustainable development *To contribute to the Resilience Strategy of the Region
A Series of videos featuring:
• Cozumel from 1968 to present by Thomas J. F. Goreau, PhD, Global Coral Reef Alliance
• Macrolife in Cozumel by Photographer Robert Stansfield
• Blue Finance by Santiago J. Bucaram, IDB
• New Paradigm of Tourism by Natalia Bayona , UN WTO
• Sailing for Sustainability by Emilie McGlone, Peace Boat
• Coastal Protection by Reefy
• Restoration Tourism by Dr. German Mendez, Cozumel Coral Reef Restoration Program
• Satellite Monitoring & AI for Water Quality & Reef Monitoring by Dr. Jose Luis Hernandez, PhD, Aquosmic
• Bioprospection by Dr. Anton Vila, PhD, INVICTUS Project
• Ending plastic by PetGas Oceans
• Climate Justice by David Tun, Mayan Cooperative “Coral Negro”
• Social Innovation by Roberto Cerda, #RestoreCoral
• PescaData by Ocean, Stuart Fulton
• Bahamas & the Colombian Caribbean
Image Credit: https://unworldoceansday.org/events/mesoamerican-reef-day-2021/
Colors and sea creatures jump from the exhibition of the Children’s Drawing Contest of the 9th Festival of the Oceans to the delight of the thousands of tourists who use the services of the Cancun International Airport, an complex with the highest passenger and aircraft traffic international and second in passengers and national aircraft in Mexico.
The exhibition shows 96 drawings that were registered by primary and secondary school students from the mexican State of Quintana Roo, the rest of Mexico and Colombia, Chile, France and the United States, to present, through their plastic works, problems that humanity is causing in the oceans such as the climate crisis, the disappearance of the vaquita, plastic pollution, overfishing and invasion of exotic species, but above all showing solutions to inspire audiences to reflect and change habits to conserve the oceans, essential in sustaining life in the planet.
This is the third time that the Cancun International Airport has hosted the Children’s Drawing Contest exhibition at theFestival of the Oceans, with a pause in 2020 due to the pandemic.
The exhibition will be open to the public in Terminal 4 of the Cancun International Airport from June 2 to September 30, 2021. The winners from Quintana Roo obtained bicycles and interactions with dolphins in Delphinus, while the winners from the rest of Mexico and abroad respectively won a trip with airfare, an all-inclusive hotel stay at Dreams Natura Resort and interactions with dolphins at Delphinus.