Project

Caribbean

Marine protection in the Dutch Caribbean

This island cluster of the Dutch Caribbean hosts a huge variety of species, many of them unique. Local governments and conservation groups have made major marine protection commitments — and Blue Marine is supporting their delivery.

Blue Climate

Blue Economics

Marine Life

Marine protection

The challenge

The islands are a migratory stopover point, home to hundreds of species of fish, 25 species of sharks, and many species of whales, dolphins, and seabirds. Their combined exclusive economics zones cover 81,000 sq km, and their coral reefs make up some of the only healthy, living reefs left in the Caribbean. Climate change has resulted in ocean warming, acidification, and an increase in storms, all of which threaten reef survival.

 

Our strategy

Blue Marine and Dutch Caribbean Nature Alliance (DCNA) have supported the Curacao government in drafting a new Nature Policy Plan, which includes the marine conservation and management commitments and objectives that Blue Marine recommended.  

In partnership with the St Maarten Nature Foundation, we completed the first stage of St Maarten’s MPA (marine protected area) legislative review, and presented the findings to Parliament, laying the foundation for increasing inshore MPA coverage.   

Our ‘small grants programme’ has helped marine conservation across the islands. Blue Economics is also supporting the Blue Nature Alliance in designing a two-day sustainable finance workshop aimed at policymakers and MPA delivery partners. This workshop will help provide a roadmap for sustainably financing MPA ambitions in the region.

Our Impact

  • In 2023,with partners DCNA and Blue Nature Alliance, we helped to catalyse major government commitments at the Our Ocean Conference in Panama.   
  • Aruba committed to creating a large MPA spanning their entire ocean area of 25,199 sq km.  
  • Curaçao said it will designate 30 per cent of its waters as a no-take MPA, covering 9,128 sq km.  

Work in the field

The Caribbean Sea has the largest concentration of marine species in the Atlantic. Comprised of six islands – Aruba, Bonaire, Curaçao, St Maarten, St Eustatius, and Saba – the Dutch Caribbean is home to globally threatened biodiversity.   

Since 2020, Blue Marine has been working with local partners the Dutch Caribbean Nature Alliance (DCNA), and the Nature Park foundations of the islands, on initiatives to expand marine protected areas (MPAs) in Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) and establish sustainable funding.

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