World Oceans Day

By Claire Ireland, Senior Environment Specialist, AusAID

On World Oceans Day, Australians can be proud of the crucial work being done with our tax dollars to protect the world’s oceans – and to support the people who depend so heavily on them. Our rainwater, drinking water, weather, climate, coastlines, much of our food, and even the oxygen in the air we breathe, are all ultimately provided and regulated by the sea. Their sustainable management is critical to all of us – and particularly our neighbours in the Pacific. Coastal and marine resources in the Pacific supply more than 80 per cent of food supplies and provide more than 70 per cent of income for poor families.

There is no doubt that the health of the world’s oceans is under threat. Habitat destruction and overfishing mean many of the world’s marine ecosystems are under severe stress. More than 85 per cent of global fisheries are either fully or over-exploited and 75 per cent of the world’s coral reefs are threatened by local and global pressures, including sea water acidification which prevents corals, shellfish and other organisms from growing – affecting food sources for larger fish.

The Coral Triangle Initiative is supporting biodiversity conservation, sustainable development and poverty reduction. Photo: AusAID

The Coral Triangle Initiative is supporting biodiversity conservation, sustainable development and poverty reduction. Photo: AusAID

Through our aid program, Australia is already working to address the degradation of the world’s oceans and the impact this has on the livelihoods of poor coastal communities.  Through the Coral Triangle Initiative, Australia has the potential to improve the health and livelihoods of 240 million people in the region who rely on the biodiversity and ecosystems of the Coral Triangle. Covering only 1.6 per cent of the world’s oceans, the Coral Triangle is a large marine ecosystem in the Asia Pacific region. It contains 76 per cent of all known coral species, 37 per cent of all coral reef fish, the greatest extent of mangrove forests in the world, and spawning areas for tuna and other globally-significant commercial fish species.

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Scholarships are only part of the Australian aid story in Vietnam

By Michael Wilson, Minister-Counsellor (Mekong and Regional programs) AusAID, Hanoi Vietnam

Education, Infrastructure and Environment form the big picture of where, how and why we are making a difference in Vietnam.

They are areas where we have the capacity, deep understanding and track record to deliver results. The Government of Vietnam has repeatedly identified these areas as priorities for development, as it aims to grow into a higher income industrial economy and reduce poverty rates to a single digit level within the next decade.

Opening ceremony of the My Thuan Bridge, the first across the Mekong River. This bridge now carries more than five million vehicles per year. Photo: AusAID

Opening ceremony of the My Thuan Bridge, the first across the Mekong River. This bridge now carries more than five million vehicles per year. Photo: AusAID

This year alone there are almost 250 Vietnamese academics, government officials and business leaders studying at our world-class universities thanks to Australian Government scholarships.

As AusAID’s Minister-Counsellor for Mekong and Regional programs, I have been fortunate to meet some of these and many more previous recipients of Australian scholarships. To date there have been more than 3,000 alumni, stretching over 35 years, who have been invited to study in Australia as the result of the scholarships program.

Through the many conversations I have had with graduates of the program, I’ve learned of the great appreciation alumni have not only for their education, but also for the experience – both of which they share in equal measure. AusAID makes this investment in Vietnam’s human resources because it is a priority area for development, which has also been agreed on by the Governments of Vietnam and Australia.

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World Water Day: A pause for celebration then back to business

By Adam Laidlaw, Chief Executive, WaterAid Australia

World Water Day is always a busy day in the year for us at WaterAid. AusAID has been a valued partner of our organisation since its inception in March 2004 and now, almost eight years to the day,  we have something to celebrate.

The new data from the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme released earlier
this month show that the world has achieved the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) target for drinking water and this is one of the first MDG targets to be met since they were set twelve years ago.

Kinina Coulibaly washes her hands in clean water, Simba East, in the Tienfala commune. Currently 2.5 billion still live without adequate sanitation; this represents 37 per cent of the world’s population. Photo: Layton Thompson / WaterAid.

Kinina Coulibaly washes her hands in clean water, Simba East, in the Tienfala commune. Currently 2.5 billion still live without adequate sanitation; this represents 37 per cent of the world’s population. Photo: Layton Thompson / WaterAid.

The figures revealed that between 1990 and 2010 over two billion people were provided with an improved water source showing that development works. This is a staggering achievement. While it is important to celebrate this success and learn the lessons from how this was achieved, nearly 800 million people around the globe are still without access to this essential service so we cannot afford to be complacent.

The MDG goal requires sustainable access to safe water—it is vital to ensure that those who have gained access keep it, and that water supplies are adequate for their needs. Some regions of the world are still decades away from meeting their water  MDG target. The figures reveal that Australia’s neighbours are making little progress.

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