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Agulhas and Somali Current Large Marine Ecosystems Project

Boa vinda a ASCLME 

Ao longo dos próximos cinco anos, os nove países da região Oeste do Oceano Índico, incluindo Comores, Quénia, Madagáscar, Maurícias, Moçambique, Seicheles, Somália, África do Sul e Tanzânia, irão trabalhar em conjunto através do projecto do Grande Ecossistema Marinho das Correntes de Agulhas e Somali (ASCLME).

 

Meetings PDF Versão para impressão Enviar por E-mail

This page is a list of all the ASCLME Project Meetings with links to individual meeting pages with downloadable documents, where available.

It is in reverse chronological order (with the most recent first).

Date
Meeting Place Links
9-11 March 2009
Steering Committee Meeting
ICCS, Seychelles

1) Meeting Page

2) ZIP archive of all presentations

9-13 February 2009
Working meeting of ASCLME National Data and Information Coordinators
Graham Hotel, Grahamstown, South Africa
Draft Proceedings
2-4 October 2008
Regional Project Coordination Forum
La Plantation, Mauritius
Report
29 September-1 October 2008
Regional Meeting of Technical Coordination Groups
La Plantation, Mauritius
Report
22-23 January 2008
Project Steering Committee and Inception Workshop
uShaka, Durban

1) Proceedings

2) Inception Report

 

 
The Project has taken big strides forward over the past year. One of the most important steps it has taken has been to raise the profile of governance and policy issues, as well as the issue of financial sustainability. This is important because we don’t want the Project to deliver a Strategic Action Programme (SAP), we want the Project to deliver a SAP that can be implemented. In other words, there should not be a gap between the signing of the SAP and the start of implementation of the SAP.

I am very happy with the Project Coordination Unit. It is not common to have a project running in “real time” like this. I hope that the countries follow this dynamic and that at the country level the work will also be on track.

One thing I would like to make a plea for is stability at the PSC level. We want people to be informed about the project and actively participating in it. But when people are new to the PSC they need to be informed and brought up to speed. Changes at the PSC level set us back.”

Hajanirina Razafindrainibe, Natural Resource Management Expert, Service d'Appui a la Gestion de l'Environnement  (SAGE), Madagascar.


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