Synopsis of the Inquiry Commission's Report
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Mr. Hironui Johnston Thahiti French Polynesia
Ministry of Tourism And Labor, In charge of International Transportation and Institutional relations Innovation and Digital transformation New opportunities in the the sustainable tourism era 31st March 2021 French Polynesia • Oversea collectivity of the French republic • 5.5 million km2 (as vast as western Europe or 49% of continental US ) • 118 islands, 5 archipelagoes, 67 islands inhabited • 278 400 people as of December 2019, 70% on 3 652 businesses (7.5%) Tahiti 11 897 employees (17.7%) • 43 airports About 2 000 self-employed • 25 main touristic islands 12% GDP (18% indirect and induced impacts) 2 Purposes: connect Tahiti to the world/connect the islands Honotua domestic: 5 islands/245 000 inhabitants/70% tourism traffic Natitua north: 20 islands/ 25 000 inhabitants/ 29% tourism traffic 3 Connecting the islands MANATUA, 2020, USD21 600 HONOTUA, 2010, USD 90 000 000: Tahiti-Rarotonga-Aitutaki- 000: Los Angeles-Hawaii-Tahiti Niue-Samoa HONOTUA domestic, 2010: NATITUA South, 2022, USD15 Tahiti-Moorea-Huahine-Raiatea- 000 000: Tahiti-Tubuai-Rurutu Bora Bora NATITUA North, 2018, USD 64 800 000: Tahiti-Kaukura- Asia-Tahiti-Rapa Nui-Chile Rangiroa-Fakarava-Manihi- Makemo-Hao-Takaroa-Hiva Oa- Nuku Hiva + 10 4 Tourism Forum USD200 000 Digital area: Youth, unemployed and entrepreneurs -Tourism contest winners - Workshops - Digital contest - Conferences winners - International - Polynesian tech speakers projects - 4 areas: Digital, - PRISM projects Creation, Training, jobs 5 Arioi Expérience: Tourism Sharing cultural business project expériences -
The Large-Scale Spreading of Radioactive Matter in the Ocean
IAEA-SM-354/57P XA9951304 THE LARGE-SCALE SPREADING OF RADIOACTIVE MATTER IN THE OCEAN Results of a numerical study related to potential releases at the Mururoa/Fangataufa atolls (French Polynesia) EKKEHARD MITTELSTAEDT (BSH) Bundesamt fur Seeschiffahrt und Hydrographie,Hamburg, Germany JOCHEN SEGSCHNEIDER (ECMWF)* European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecast, Reading, UK A world ocean circulation model was applied together with a tracer dispersion model to study the large-scale effects of potential radioactive releases which might arise at Mururoa and Fangataufa due to the French nuclear tests in the past at these sites. Constant as well as time-dependent radioactive sources have been assumed as input for simulations of the activity concentrations in the South Pacific ocean emanating from the test sites. Two scenarios were envisaged: the total radioactivity released enters the ocean through the lagoon the total radioactivity released enters the ocean sideways at subsurface depths through the karst layer. The karst represents a potential conducting medium for radionuclides coming from the vulcanic formations down below. The circulation model used were developed at the Max- Planck-Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, to study global climate changes. It is a prognostic OGCM and has a special resolution of 3.5 x 3.5 degrees in the horizontal and 22 layers in the vertical. It provides the input data for the Lagrangian transport model (tracer dispersion model). The horizontal and vertical spreading of the tracers considered due to the large- scale circulation and subgrid-scale mixing is treated by means of Lagrangian partical tracking combined with a Monte Carlo- method . -
Law of Thesea
Division for Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea Office of Legal Affairs Law of the Sea Bulletin No. 82 asdf United Nations New York, 2014 NOTE The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Furthermore, publication in the Bulletin of information concerning developments relating to the law of the sea emanating from actions and decisions taken by States does not imply recognition by the United Nations of the validity of the actions and decisions in question. IF ANY MATERIAL CONTAINED IN THE BULLETIN IS REPRODUCED IN PART OR IN WHOLE, DUE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT SHOULD BE GIVEN. Copyright © United Nations, 2013 Page I. UNITED NATIONS CONVENTION ON THE LAW OF THE SEA ......................................................... 1 Status of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, of the Agreement relating to the Implementation of Part XI of the Convention and of the Agreement for the Implementation of the Provisions of the Convention relating to the Conservation and Management of Straddling Fish Stocks and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks ................................................................................................................ 1 1. Table recapitulating the status of the Convention and of the related Agreements, as at 31 July 2013 ........................................................................................................................... 1 2. Chronological lists of ratifications of, accessions and successions to the Convention and the related Agreements, as at 31 July 2013 .......................................................................................... 9 a. The Convention ....................................................................................................................... 9 b. -
A Sociopolitical Analysis of Drinking Water Governance in French Polynesia: the Case of the Tuamotu Archipelago
www.water-alternatives.org Volume 12 | Issue 3 Fustec, K. 2019. A sociopolitical analysis of drinking water governance in French Polynesia: The case of the Tuamotu Archipelago. Water Alternatives 12(3): 975-992 A Sociopolitical Analysis of Drinking Water Governance in French Polynesia: The Case of the Tuamotu Archipelago Klervi Fustec Independent researcher, France; [email protected] ABSTRACT: The assertion that only a small percentage of the French Polynesian population has access to drinking water is found in press reports and in reports by the French Senate and the French Polynesian Centre for Hygiene and Public Health, reports that were prepared in the context of implementing a new water law. In reality, however, inhabitants do have access to drinking water. How can we explain this discrepancy? This article analyses the sociopolitical dimensions of multilevel formal water governance in Tuamotu, one of the five French Polynesian archipelagos. Tuamotu's inhabitants use household rainwater harvesting cisterns for their drinking water provision. The analysis demonstrates that the current formal governance system is incapable of generating locally relevant and specific policies, and continues to struggle with inappropriate policy ideas derived from French Polynesia's experience as a French State. KEYWORDS: Drinking water, cisterns, multilevel formal governance, French Polynesia, Tuamotu INTRODUCTION French Polynesia is a French territory in the Pacific Ocean consisting of 48 municipalities. Since the 2004 reforms, it has enjoyed a degree of autonomy from the French State.1 While the French Polynesian government is responsible for general planning and water quality issues, it is the local authorities which have responsibility for access to drinking water and implementation of water. -
From the Atolls to the Seas by Pavel Peter Povinec and Ekkehard Mittelstaedt
Doc-09.qxd 1/21/99 10:19 AM Page 34 DISPERSION OF RESIDUAL RADIONUCLIDES FROM MURUROA AND FANGATAUFA THROUGH THE OCEAN FROM THE ATOLLS TO THE SEAS BY PAVEL PETER POVINEC AND EKKEHARD MITTELSTAEDT odelling the Working Group. A model of The outputs from these transport of the mixing of water was used models are estimates of Mradionuclides to estimate radionuclide radionuclide concentrations in through the marine concentrations in the lagoons the ocean as a function of time environment is a complex for given releases from and location. These exercise. As part of the Study underground into the lagoons, concentrations were used to on the Radiological Situation and the flow rates of estimate doses to real and at the Atolls of Mururoa and radionuclides from the lagoons hypothetical people at various Fangataufa, scientists into the surrounding ocean. locations and times in the investigated the dispersion of A sediment model was future. radionuclides after their release developed to predict the from Mururoa and Fangataufa movement of sediment MODELLING OF lagoons and from underground between the lagoons and the THE LAGOONS sources. The investigation ocean. Estimates were made of Radionuclides in the lagoon covered mixing processes the amount of sediment, and the waters arise from the leaching within the lagoons, discharge corresponding quantity of of radioactive material from into the ocean, and transport plutonium, leaving the lagoons the lagoon sediments and from to the shores of neighbouring annually under average weather migration of material from the 34 islands and distant continents. conditions, or with a severe underground sources. Their This article highlights work storm. -
Typology of Atoll Rims in Tuamotu Archipelago (French Polynesia) at Landscape Scale Using SPOT HRV Images
INT. J. REMOTE SENSING, 2001, YOL. 22, NO. 6,987-1004 Typology of atoll rims in Tuamotu Archipelago (French Polynesia) at landscape scale using SPOT HRV images 3 4 s, S. ANDREFOUETI.2, M. CLAEREBOUDT • , P. MATSAKIS J. PAGES6 and P. DUFOUR3 I Laboratoire de Geosciences Marines et Teledetection, Universite Francaise du Pacifique, BP 6570 Faaa-Aeroport, Tahiti, French Polynesia 2Remote Sensing Biological Oceanography Lab., University of South Florida, Department of Marine Science, 140, 7th Avenue South, St Petersburg, FL 33701, USA 3IRD, Centre d'Oceanologie de Marseille, rue de la Batterie des Lions, F-1037 Marseille, France "College of Agriculture, Fisheries Dept., Sultan Qaboos University, P.O Box 34, Al-Khad 123, Sultanate of Oman SInstitut de Recherche en Informatique de Toulouse, Universite Paul Sabatier Toulouse-ll8, Route de Narbonne 31062 Toulouse Cedex, France "Centre IRD de Tahiti, BP 529 Papeete, Tahiti, French Polynesia (Received 31 August 1998; in final form 22 November 1999) Abstract. The lagoon of an atoll is separated from the ocean by a rim. As the rim controls the flux of water between ocean and lagoon, its structure is one of the major forcing factors of the biological processes that depend on the renewal rate of lagoonal water. Characterizing rim structure and its degree of hydro dynamic aperture is mandatory for comparing the functioning of different atoll lagoons. This paper characterizes at landscape scale the different types of rims of the atolls of the Tuamotu Archipelago (French Polynesia) using SPOT HRV multi-spectral images. The classification of 117 segments of rims highlights nine different rims. -
Rose Atoll National Wildlife Refuge U.S
Rose Atoll National Wildlife Refuge U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service 300 Ala Moana Blvd., Rm 5-231 Box 50167 Honolulu, Hawaii 96850 Rose Atoll National Wildlife Refuge Planning Update Number 1, November 2009 Address Correction Requested Coral garden in Rose Atoll National Wildlife Refuge’s lagoon / Greg Sanders, USFWS 6 Help Us Plan for the Future! Over the next month, the U.S. participation in the planning However, we have an opportunity You are invited to the first Open House Public Scoping Meetings Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) process for the Refuge. As we to consider whether public will be seeking input from the begin this planning process, we programs such as environmental Meetings will be held in the Manu‘a islands during November. They will be advertised locally. public, interested agencies, are provided the opportunity to education and wildlife observation and organizations regarding look at our habitat management may be possible and to review One meeting will be held on the island of Tutuila at the Utulei Convention Center on Thursday, their interests, concerns, and and public programs from fresh our management of habitats such November 19 from 4 to 6 p.m. viewpoints about important perspectives. as coral reefs, sand islands, and refuge management issues. This Pisonia forest. Your insights and We hope to see you there! information will be helpful in the Currently, the Refuge is closed observations are needed to provide production of a Comprehensive to the public to protect nesting a more complete and thoughtful Conservation Plan (CCP) for seabirds and rare marine life that process. -
Current Status of the Endangered Tuamotu Sandpiper Or Titi Prosobonia Cancellata and Recommended Actions for Its Recovery
Current status of the endangered Tuamotu Sandpiper or Titi Prosobonia cancellata and recommended actions for its recovery R.J. PIERCE • & C. BLANVILLAIN 2 WildlandConsultants, PO Box 1305, Whangarei,New Zealand. raypierce@xtra. co. nz 2Soci•t• d'Omithologiede Polyn•sieFrancaise, BP 21098, Papeete,Tahiti Pierce,R.J. & Blanvillain, C. 2004. Current statusof the endangeredTuamotu Sandpiper or Titi Prosobonia cancellataand recommendedactions for its recovery.Wader StudyGroup Bull. 105: 93-100. The TuamotuSandpiper or Titi is the only survivingmember of the Tribe Prosoboniiniand is confinedto easternPolynesia. Formerly distributedthroughout the Tuamotu Archipelago,it has been decimatedby mammalianpredators which now occuron nearlyall atollsof the archipelago.Isolated sandpiper populations are currentlyknown from only four uninhabitedatolls in the Tuamotu.Only two of theseare currentlyfree of mammalianpredators, such as cats and rats, and the risks of rat invasionon themare high. This paper outlines tasksnecessary in the shortterm (within five years)to securethe species,together with longerterm actions neededfor its recovery.Short-term actions include increasing the securityof existingpopulations, surveying for otherpotential populations, eradicating mammalian predators on key atolls,monitoring key populations, and preparing a recovery plan for the species. Longer term actions necessaryfor recovery include reintroductions,advocacy and research programmes. INTRODUCTION ecologyof the TuamotuSandpiper as completelyas is cur- rently known, assessesthe -
Radiation Exposures and Compensation of Victims of French Atmospheric Nuclear Tests in Polynesia
Radiation Exposures and Compensation of Victims of French Atmospheric Nuclear Tests in Polynesia Sébastien Philippe1,* Sonya Schoenberger2,3, Nabil Ahmed4 1 Program on Science and Global Security, Princeton University, 221 Nassau St, 2nd floor, Princeton NJ 08540, USA 2 Department of History, Stanford University, 450 Serra Mall Bldg 200, Stanford, CA 94305, USA 3 Yale Law School, 127 Wall St, New Haven, CT 06511, USA 4 Faculty of Architecture and Design, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Alfred Getz vei 3, 7491 Trondheim, Norway *To whom correspondence should be addressed: [email protected] Abstract Between 1966 and 1974, France conducted 41 atmospheric nuclear weapon tests in Polynesia. Radioactive fallout impacted downwind atolls and islands leading to the external and internal exposure of the local populations to ionizing radiation. By law, individuals who were exposed to radiation in the context of these tests can file compensation claims with the French government if they develop certain radiogenic cancers. A claimant who meets the basic eligibility criteria (place, time, and type of disease) automatically benefits from the presumption of a causal link between radiation exposure and the development of their illness, unless the exposure is deemed too low. Since 2017, an effective dose threshold of 1 mSv per year has been used in the claims adjudication process. Decisions as to whether claimants have met this 1 mSv threshold in a given year are often made on the basis of data from government dose reconstruction studies carried out in 2005 and 2006. Using new information available from recently declassified documents on the radiological impact of French atmospheric nuclear tests in Polynesia, as well as atmospheric transport modeling of radioactive fallout, this article shows that maximum doses to the public for key atmospheric tests may have been underestimated by factors of 2 to 10 and estimates that the total population exposed above the compensation threshold of 1 mSv/yr could be greater than ~110,000. -
Ctmit Kura Ora Ii
Tuamotu islands Society islands - Tahiti C.T.M.I.T KURA ORA II Motu-Uta, Fare Ute, Papeete Fax : (689) 45.55.44 Contact : Mrs. Vanina PAQUIER Mobile : (689) 78.82.92 B.P. 9779 - 98715 Motu Uta Papeete E-mail : [email protected] - Tahiti Tel. : (689) 45.55.45 Description Freight, vehicle and passenger transport on a 186 ft. steel hull ship. No berths on board. Frequency: One 17-day voyage every month at 2 weeks of interval with the Kura Ora 3. Cruising speed: 10 knots. Meals served on board. The schedule depends on the freight and the weather conditions. Itinerary: Papeete - Anaa - Faaite - Katiu - Makemo - Taenga - Nihiru - Hikueru - Marokau - Tauere - Amanu - Hao - Nukutavake - Vairaatea - Reao - Pukarua - Tatakoto - Puka Puka - Fakahina - Fangatau - Napuka - Northern Tepoto - Raroia - Takume - Papeete OFFICE OPENING HOURS Monday to Friday: 07:30 am - 03:30 pm Saturday: a few hours before the leaving of the ship PROJECTED SCHEDULES (from January to July) Departure: 26/01/08 - Arrival: 14/02/08 Departure: 23/02/08 - Arrival: 13/03/08 Departure: 22/03/08 - Arrival: 10/04/08 Departure: 19/04/08 - Arrival: 07/05/08 Departure: 17/05/08 - Arrival: 04/06/08 Departure: 14/06/08 - Arrival: 16/07/08 Departure: 12/07/08 - Arrival: 30/07/08 All taxes included rates Central Tuamotu : 6000 CFP/pers. (deck) CFP/pers. (cabin) Central Tuamotu : 7000 Eastern Tuamotu : 7000 CFP/pers. (deck) CFP/pers. (cabin) Eastern Tuamotu : 8000 Northeastern Tuamotu : 6500 CFP/pers. (cabin) CFP/pers. (deck) Northeastern Tuamotu : 7500 26/02/2008 10:30 Page 1 Tuamotu islands Society islands - Tahiti COBIA 3 Motu-Uta, Fare Ute, Papeete Tel. -
Sop-Manu Tuamotu Expedition
Survey for Arctic-breeding Shorebirds in the Tuamotu Archipelago, French Polynesia, March 2003 Prepared by Lee Tibbitts, U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska Science Center, 1011 E. Tudor Rd., Anchorage, Alaska 99503; Tel 907 786 3340, Email [email protected] Richard Lanctot, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Migratory Bird Management, 1011 E. Tudor Rd., Anchorage, Alaska 99503; 907 786 3609, [email protected] Eric VanderWerf, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Ecological Services Division, 300 Ala Moana Blvd. Honolulu, Hawaii 96850; 808 792 9400, [email protected] Verena Gill, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Marine Mammals Management, 1011 E. Tudor Rd., Anchorage, Alaska 99503; 907 786 3584, [email protected] Information presented here is preliminary and should not be cited without permission of the authors. If cited please use: Tibbitts, T.L., R.B. Lanctot, E. VanderWerf, and V.A. Gill. 2003. Survey for Arctic- breeding shorebirds in the Tuamotu Archipelago, French Polynesia, March 2003. Unpublished report for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Geological Survey, Alaska. Arctic-breeding Shorebirds in French Polynesia 2 Executive Summary In March 2003, biologists from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and U.S. Geological Survey joined an international expedition headed by biologists from La Société d’Ornithologie de Polynésie and Wildland Consultants of New Zealand and traveled to remote atolls in the Tuamotu Archipelago, French Polynesia. The objectives of this collaborative venture were to (1) determine the presence and approximate numbers of resident and migratory birds and mammalian pests on several, mostly uninhabited, atolls in the central and southern Tuamotu Archipelago, (2) search for color-marked Bristle- thighed Curlews (Numenius tahitiensis), and where possible, capture and collect blood samples from individuals of this species, (3) conduct pelagic surveys for seabirds, and (4) promote cooperative bird research in the Central Pacific. -
The Tuamotus Compendium
The Tuamotus Compendium A Compilation of Guidebook References and Cruising Reports IMPORTANT: USE ALL INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT AT YOUR OWN RISK!! Rev 2021.9 – July 23, 2021 Please send us updates to this guide! Keep the Tuamotus compendium alive by being a contributor. We are especially looking for information on places where we have no cruiser information and new information on existing content. It’s easy to participate and will help many other cruisers for years to come. Simply email your updates along with your boat details. Email Soggy Paws at sherry –at- svsoggypaws –dot- com. You can also contact us on Sailmail at WDI5677 The current home (and the most up to date) version of this document is: http://svsoggypaws.com/files/#frpoly If you found this compendium posted elsewhere, it might not be the most current version. Please check the above site for the most up to date copy and remember, it will always be free! Page 1 Revision Log Many thanks to all who have contributed over the years!! Rev Date Notes 2021.9 July 23, 2021 Air Tahiti Seniors Discount 2021.8 June 28, 2021 Minor update to Toau 2021.7 June 19, 2021 Updates to Katiu from Eastern Stream Updates: Raroia, Amanu, Fakarava, & Toau by Grace of Longstone. Changes to Hao, 2021.6 June 11, 2021 Amanu, Tahanea & Fakarava from Sugar Shack. New Info on Faaite from Slingshot. 2021.5 April 21, 2021 Various revisions and updates from Ari B 2021.4 April 5, 2021 Various revisions and updates from Sugar Shack & more updates from Trance.