Marine Journey Event Guide IUCN World Conservation Congress - Hawai’i 2016

Held once every four years, We are very lucky to have the IUCN World Conserva- inspiring marine conserva- tion Congress looks to bring tion heroes in attendance, together change-makers including the author of this from across the world, repre- year’s editorial, Sylvia Earle, senting the brightest minds an IUCN Patron of Nature and in academia, government, the founder of Mission Blue. business, indigenous peo- Her presence, among other ples and civil society to find amazing attendees at this innovative solutions for our year’s Congress, will create planet. The IUCN World Con- an atmosphere of excitement servation Congress therefore and possibility that will set provides a unique and well- the scene for successful deci- timed opportunity to add to sion-making. the historic agreement at the UNFCCC COP Paris and will If you’ll be in beautiful serve to mobilise action. Hawai’i, please join us at our Oceans & Islands Pavil- The theme of this year’s Con- ion, which will be organised gress is “Planet at the cross- around three key themes: roads”, highlighting the ne- - Marine Protected Area cessity for urgent change and Networks the importance of making -Islands & Overseas Territories the right decisions now that - Financing & Blue Economy will affect our planet and future generations. Instead We will explore the issues of succumbing to a pessi- facing our oceans, islands mist narrative, IUCN chooses and our poles today and pro- instead to insist that we are vide a space where interested ready and able to take on individuals and professionals this important challenge and can mingle and discuss solu- make great change together. tions for the future. Marine events at a glance...

68 Years 175 Events 91 Since the first Taking place at this Pavillion Congress years congress Events

34 40 6 Workshop Knowledge Conservation Events Cafés Campuses Oceans Warming Report to be released at Congress

The IUCN Congress marks a The report provides analysis of unique opportunity to bring the existing and likely future together change-makers to economic consequences, in- develop collaborative solu- cluding on the weather, the tions to benefit the health protection of coasts and on of our planet. At this year’s the contributions of fisheries Congress, IUCN will release and aquaculture. The report a landmark publication on also importantly reviews po- ocean warming that is the tential risks to human health most recent and comprehen- and well-being. sive report ever published on the subject. Finally, the report finishes by detailing what changes Bringing together 80 scien- are currently underway and tists from 12 countries, this what we can expect from the report seeks to provide a future, with some key rec- comprehensive analysis on ommendations. It should be the impacts to the ocean from used to contribute to further absorbing more than 93% of discussion and thought on the enhanced heating from this subject, in particular at the greenhouse effect and high-levels such as in the In- other human activities since tergovernmental Panel on the 1970s. Climate Change, as well as for use by governments, agencies The report delves deep into and experts worldwide. this issue, analysing the im- pacts on ocean ecosystems, Ensuring the resiliency of our species and even the deep oceans is vital to the planet’s remote ocean. It reviews the survival. Please join us for impacts and effects of ocean subsequent important discus- warming on specific seas and sions on this report and issue ecosystems ranging from mi- in the Oceans & Islands Pavil- cro-organisms up to marine ion and at other events during turtles and mammals. The the Congress. report also examines the im- pacts on ecosystem services.

>93% 2015 120 years of the enhanced heating was the since we found since the 1970s due to the greenhouse effect warmest on out about global has been absorbed record warming by the ocean

The upper Ocean warming 700m results in a loss of of the ocean contains the same heat content OXYGEN 2.5Gt as ~240 times the in water, due to re- of frozen methane global energy duced solubility, hydrate are stored consumption impacting in the sea floor in 2013 Ecosystems. ALA WAI CANAL Level Floor Plan Map To Waikīkī / Diamond Head Note: KALĀKAUA BALLROOM is ALA WAI PROMENADE To Ala Wai Yacht Harbor (ALA HOKU) located on the 4th Floor. 12 min to trolley stop 8 (Waikīkī Gateway Hotel) 1 LEGEND EXIT Notes: Information / Mobile App Helpdesk / EXIT My Green Congress / KAHAKAI DRIVE Excursions EXIT EXIT EXIT EXIT EXIT @ Congress Info Hotspot

Parking Entrance Twitter Wall

Restricted area 330 @ Co ee Corner UP WATER 130 Food Court BUSINESS & 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 Information Screens BIODIVERSITY KALĀKAUA 1034 @ AVENUE 36 26 Public O ces 1032 1033 932 931 832 833 732 731 632 633 532 37 25 Seating Area 1030 1029 930 830 831 730 630 631 530 318 @ 38 24 1028 928 929 828 829 728 729 628 629 528 OCEANS 39 @ & Entertainment Stage 118 ISLANDS 1022 1023 922 923 820 823 722 723 622 621 522 Restroom (Men) FOREST 1020 1021 920 921 821 718 721 620 520 GOOGLE GALAXY EXITEXIT 1016 1019 918 919 818 817 717 618 619 518 E-POSTERS KAHAKAI DRIVE Restroom (Women) 1017 916 917 816 716 616 617 516 @ 312 311 Restroom (Universal)

810 808 708 610 510 412 411 310 309 308 1100 The Javan Framework 100 Gibbon Partners Foundation Hub Parking Exit Water Fountain #NATURE FORALL 900 700 300 HAWAI’I EXIT PACIFIC Bottle Filler PROTECTED SPECIES USA PAVILION PAVILION PLANET CONSERVATION Smoking Area

Pay Phone

ON-SITE REG. MEDIA REG. HOUSING PAYMENTS PRE-REGISTRATION EXIT TDD / Pay Phone MAIN LOBBY @ EXIT ATM

Parking

Bicycle Parking

Entrance PORTE COCHERE To Ala Moana Beach Park Automatic Entry Door KAPI`OLANI BOULEVARD GIFT OF WATER STATUE Crosswalk ATKINSON DRIVE Accessible Passenger Loading Zone

PAVILIONS AND BOOTHS Escalator (2nd FL Parking) 12 min to trolley stop 12 Escalator (3rd & 4th FL) (Ala Moana Center) PUBLIC OFFICES Elevator E-POSTERS 1 EXHIBIT HALL / LOBBY ART EXHIBITION ALA WAI CANAL Level To Waikīkī / Diamond Head ALA WAI PROMENADE To Ala Wai Yacht Harbor (ALA HOKU)

LOADING DOCK (Level 1) BALCONY 3

VIP LOUNGE PARKING (Level 2) 22 (327-328) LEGEND

WAI LANI Information / WATERFALL Mobile App Helpdesk KAHAKAI DRIVE @ Congress Info Hotspot LILI`U 310 THEATER 808 808 Co ees Cafe´

313C 316C 309 Food Court

MEDIA CENTRE PĀ KALOKA BROADCASTERS Information Screens 308B (323C) “CHARLOT COURTYARD” 313B 316B Business Centre 308A 808 KALĀKAUA AVENUE MEDIA CENTRE First Aid MEMBERS’ (323A-B) LOUNGE 307A-B 313A 316A (306B-306A) Restroom (Men) KNOWLEDGE HUB Restroom (Women) 304B 305B 312 315 STATE NATURAL KAHAKAI DRIVE Water Fountain RESERVE 304A “KHAKASSKY” LOUNGE SPEAKERS PĀ KAMALI`I PREVIEW ROOM Bottle Filler (303B) UNDP “CHILDREN’S COURTYARD” KAUHALE PRAYER KNOWLEDGE ROOM (314) (303A) CAFE NATIONAL REPUBLIC Smoking Area (311) GEOGRAPHIC OF KOREA LOUNGE LOUNGE Pay Phone 301B 301A 319A 319B 317A 317B 318A 318B TDD / Pay Phone PĀ KALIHI COURTYARD @ @ ATM

Parking PRESS CONFERENCE ROOM MAIN LOBBY (Level 1) (320) Entrance Automatic Entry Door

Escalator (2nd FL Parking) PORTE COCHERE To Ala Moana Beach Park Escalator (3rd & 4th FL)

Elevator KAPI`OLANI BOULEVARD GIFT OF WATER STATUE ATKINSON DRIVE

CONSERVATION CAMPUS

SESSION ROOMS

MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS

NETWORKING LOUNGES

MEMBERS LOUNGE

3 MEETING ROOMS / THEATERS ART EXHIBITION Friday the nd2 of September 09:30-10:00NOAA’s Science on a Sphere: Maps to 10:00-10:30The smallest biggest plastic 09:30 - 10:00 Discover Our World pollution event in the world IUCN - Oceans & Islands Pavilion 11:00-13:30Global NOAA/TBG - Pavilion 11:00-13:00 11:00-13:00 11:30-12:00 Ecotourism as a tool for 12:00-12:30Small Green Islands Summit Marine Planning 11:00-12:00 NOAA’s Science on a conservation of iconic 11:00-13:00 11:00-13:00 11:00-13:00Blue 12:30 - 13:00 Sustainable Islands (GGIS): Establishing Advancement Training Welcome for Pacific Sphere: New Frontiers inmarine species in the Match Maker: Innovative Governance Economy: Reducing Tech Initiative – A global Sustainable Islands Conservation Campus Island Leaders Earth Observations Pacific Islands connecting citizen Approaches for the the impact of marine Corner: Mapping network to promote Cooperation Framework Duke University - 11:00 - 13:00 IUCN Oceania Regional NOAA/TBG science to the IUCN Sustainable Use and fisheries bycatch on the Marine National islands as sustainable Environment Policy Nicholas School of the Office United States Pavilion Red List Management of biodiversity: policy, Monuments of the development pioneers Division, Jeju Special Self- Environment Hawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion B Marine Megafauna Mangrove Ecosystems: economic instruments Pacific Pavilion Event Governing Province, ROK Secretariat of the Pacific Room 305B Foundation The Experience of and technical change NOAA, Pacific Islands Conservatoir du Littoral Room 307AB Regional Environment Room 311-13 Conservation Campus Fisheries Science Center Oceans & Islands Pavilion Programme- SPREP EBCD United States Pavilion Room 315 CI-Ecuador Room 319B Oceans & Islands Pavilion

13:00-14:00Light Animal Magic: Homes for Whales13:30 - 14:30Sharing solutions through the Panorama 13:30 - 14:30 in the Sea partnership: Platform launch with marine and coastal ICMMPA, IUCN Marine Mammal Protected Areas examplesTask Force, NOAA - Room 310 IUCN - Oceans & Islands Pavilion 14:30 - 16:30 14.30-19:00 14:30 - 16:30 14:30-15:00 14:30-15:00 What 14:30 - 16:30How Blue Planning 15:00-15:30 14:30 - 16:30 14:30-16:30 16:00-16:30 Living Leaders of Tomorrow Biodiversity in Watamu The NOAA Fleet: Taking can Indigenous Peoples reliable is the control in Practice – Training Blue Bonds From individual shorelines on Tropical Making Changes Today--Effective Strategies for Marine National Park: newthe Pulse of the Planet and local communities of international caviar course on spatial planningOceans & Islands Pavilion MPAs to a resilient Islands: Creating and Equitable Governance maintaining healthy coastal 14:30 - 16:30 study reveals important NOAA contribute to the trade? processes in coastal and Tackling Marine Litternetwork - approach species diversity previously governance of marine marine environments Knowledge Café systems and improving United States Pavilion IUCN Sturgeon Specialist IUCN GMPP; UNEP; from the Russian Arctic.community resilience in the overlooked biodiversity beyond Conservation Campus Blue Punahou School A Rocha International national jurisdiction? Group / World Sturgeon Solutions; GIZ; GRID- IUCN MediterraneanWWF Russia face of climate change 15:30-16:30 Room 311-5 Oceans & Islands Pavilion Species Conservation United Nations University Conservation Society Arendal; IUCN; UNEP Office Hawaii Shore and Beach Pavilion Room 311-8 Room 311-6 Room15:30-16:30 308B Lawaiʻa Pono: Ancient Preservation Association River deltas at Hawaiian Fishing Room 313C 316C 15:30-16:30 Practices Applied in Safeguarding space forthe crossroads: 14:30 - 16:30 14:30-19:00 transformative Modern Contexts nature, securing our Kuaʻāina Ulu ʻAuamo Sustainability and Application of future change for people and livelihoods in the home 14:30 - 16:30 Monitoring, Control ecosystems Hawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion Zoological Society of B Aquarium Trade The High Seas: and Surveillance London Conservation New England Aquarium Conserving the (MCS) Tools for MarineProtected Planet International Room 311-13 Protected Area (MPA) Pavilion Water Pavilion Earth’s Final Enforcement 17:00 - 18:00 Frontier NOAA, Office of 18:00-19:00 National Marine Carl Gustaf 18:00-19:00 Inspiring Brighter Futures Sanctuaries for Conservation Room 307AB 17:00-19:00 Mālama Honua Lundin Ocean Health and Worldwide Voyage & Canadian Wildlife Conservation Campus 17:00-19:00 Ocean Wealth: Tools Promise to Paeʻ Āina o Federation IUCN Innovation in Protecting 17:00-19:00 for assessing progress Hawaiʻi Oceans & Islands Pavilion Marine Ecosystems and Room 313A 17:00-19:00 World Fish Migration toward conservation Polynesian Voyaging 17:00-17:30 Moving Towards a Managing Fisheries and 17:00-17:30 Platform: creating goals Society NOAA’s Science on a Sustainable mangrove Tourism in the Coral Marine Seismic Surveys : awareness on fish The Nature ConservancyHawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion B 17:00-18:00 Sphere: Voyaging for a economy Triangle – Collaborative Locally management guidelines migration and free- Room 311-9 The Integrated Changing Planet Conservatoire du Littoral Approaches 17:00 - 19:00 IUCN flowing rivers Managed Marine Areas Management NOAA/TBG Room 318B WWF Coral Triangle Oceans & Islands Pavilion World Fish Migration Exchanges and Global Effectiveness Tool United States Pavilion Foundation Programme Lessons Learning: (IMET) for protected Room 311-3 Room 313C Increasing impact areas: discover the IMET through community- process based adaptive Joint Research Centre management (JRC) Protected Planet Pavilion Hawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion B

19:30-21:00 19:30-21:30 Pau Hana: A Celebration of the 10-year19:30 - 21:30Oceans, What’s Next? 19:30 - 22:00 The Islands and the Whales Screening – DocumentaryAnniversary of Papahanaumokuakea IUCN Global Marine & Polar Programme TIME The Pew Charitable Trusts Pavilion Event Film as a Tool for Change Influence Film 17:00-19:00 Hawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion B Oceans & Islands Pavilion Club Room 310 Ocean Health and Ocean Wealth: Tools TITLE for assessing progress Event Types Key: Pavilion Events Workshop Knowledge Café Other Events toward conservation HOST Conservation Campus EVENT TYPE Thematic Journeys: Youth and Young Marine Protected Islands and Blue Economy Pollution Species Law and Policy Room 311-9 Professionals Blue Solutions Areas Netwrok Climate Change LOCATION Saturday therd 3 of September 09:30-10:00NOAA’s Science 8:30 - 10:30Wet and Wild: 07:00-08:00Breakfast with 08:30-10:30Establishing Global 08:30-10:30Regional 08:30-10:30Managing maritime 08:30-10:30The Ramsar world Promoting Sustainable and 10:00 - 10:30Exploring the deep on a Sphere: Fisheries, Climate 09:30 - 10:00 Sharks: Sustainable Trade Island Initiative for Biocultural Sustainable Tourism Initiativestraffic in the high seas: exploring wetlandthe city scheme: inspiring Responsible Ecotourism ocean: Earth’s most critical Diversity and Sustainable Islands Change, and Aquaculture through CITES use of IMO conservation tools in Experiences with Marine Cooperation as Conservation Change Agents local communities to value NOAA frontier Blue Resources Important Marine Mammal Areas Wildlife Institution for Marine and Island IUCN Centre for Mediterranean(IMMAs) wetlands United States Pavilion IUCN Room 313C Cultures, Mokpo National UniversityCooperation IUCN Joint Marine Mammal Auckland City Oceans & Islands Pavilion Room 319A Room 311-8 Protected Areas Task Force Room 311-7 NOAA Fisheries Pacific Islands Regional Room 311-13 OfficeRoom - 311-4

11:00-13:00 12:00-13:00 12:00-12:30 11:00-13:00 What factors 11:00-13:00 11:00-13:00 11:00-13:00 Pacific Biodiversity 12:00-13:00 Ridge to Reef to Sea to determine protected area success Governance of Marine Biodiversity inBalancing the Needs for Blue Economy: Diving The Science of Social MarketingBlue Belt - Building capacity Public-private alliances: Ocean: Coastal and Marine in conserving biodiversity on land Areas beyond National Jurisdiction:Conserving and Consuming with Cetaceans: Closing the and Behaviour Change in marine protected area consolidating a shared vision of and sea? What are the policy Progressions and Challenges Conservation in Small Islands 11:00 - 13:00 Endangered, Threatened and Breach between Tourism and Rare management across Pacific islandconservation implications of the new research? Dalhousie University and WCEL countries and territories States. Specialist Group on Oceans, Coasts Protected Marine Species Conservation in South Asia Room 311-4 Asociación Costa Rica por Global Environment Facility WCPA / SSC - World Commission on and Coral Reefs WWF Indonesia Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Siempre Protected Areas and Species Survival Oceans & Islands Pavilion Room 301B Room 311-8 IUCN11:00-13:00 India Country Office Environment Programme Protected Planet Pavilion Commission - Room 316A 11:30-12:00 11:30-12:00 Migratory fish - the challenges 11:00-12:00 Oceans & Islands Pavilion Hawai’i-Pacific Pavilion A The National Red List of Fish forNOAA’s Science on a Sphere: of balancing water development Rodrigues, small Island – Big Burkina Faso Marine Protected Areas (MPAs)and ecological integrity in commitments Species Conservation Pavilion NOAA/TBG freshwater systems Indian Ocean Commission United States Pavilion Zoological Society of London Hawai’i-Pacific Pavilion A Room 311-9

13:30 - 14:30Building Pacific Partnerships - Ocean Exploration to Inform 13:00-14:30Regional MPA Networks: their contribution 13:00-13:30Partnership with 13:00 - 14:00ight L Animal Magic: Homes for Whales in the Sea 13:00-14:30Lunch at the 13:30 - 14:30 Resource Management NOAA Office of International Affairs United Statesto Pavilionglobal challenges - MedPAN - Oceans & Islands Pavilion Parley for the Oceans Plastic ICMMPA, IUCN Marine Mammal Protected Areas Task Force, NOAAPavilion Soup Foundation - Room 320 Room 310 Hawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion B 14:30-16:30 16:00 - 16:30 14:30 - 16:30The Power of Art 14:30-15:00NOAA’s Science 14:30-15:30 14:30-16:30Marine Litter Up 14:30 - 16:30 14:30-16:30 in Conservation: Art and marine Papakumakawalu Sustainable Oceans Lab Building Blocks of Large-Scale How can economists help Business and migratory birds: on a Sphere: Mālama Honua - A deep dive into shared Close conservation workshop Declarations: Messages from theEdith Kanakaole Foundation MPAs: The how-tos of designing IUCN Global Marine Community:conservation decision-makers?creating strategic partnerships stewardship marine conservation at-scale Pavilion Event 14:30 - 16:30 Ocean People of Island Earth Hawai’i-Pacific Pavilion A Americas -Room 318B Pacific Community (SPC) for flyways conservation Honolulu Museum of Art Blue Solutions IUCN WCPA Large-Scale MPA Task Room 318A BirdLife International NOAA/TBG Oceans & Islands Pavilion Force Hawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion B United States Pavilion Room 317A Room 311-6 14:30-16:30 15:30-16:00Tech Corner: 14:30-16:30Freshwater Fish 15:00-15:30 Papahanaumokuakea Marine Managing impacts of the oil 14:30-16:30European BEST 14:30-16:30Challenges and Scaling Up Conservation in theNational Monument 15:30-16:30Incorporating & gas sector on the marine Initiative Event: Fostering Conservation, Food Security, Largest Ocean on Earth Climate Adaptation into Agency- biodiversity action in 7 key regionsOpportunities for Biocultural and Livelihoods – Identifying Papahānaumokuākea Marine Level Planning in the Pacific environment Conservation on Mediteranean Big Ocean National Monument and IUCN of the world Win-Win-Win Scenarios Islands Region IUCN (in partnership with the Islands and Coasts Oceans & Islands Pavilion UNESCO World Heritage Site Center for Cultural and Technical17:00-17:30 Room 311-9 United States Pavilion Interchange Between East and European Commission and the IUCN Carleton University 17:00-19:00 Hopespots European Parliament) Room 311-12 17:00-19:00 VoyagersWest and Navigators - Room 320 Room 317B 17:00-19:00Ocean Planning: Innovative Financing of MarineHawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion A Oceans & Islands Pavilion 17:00-19:00 Facing the Challenges of Stories from the Moana Pasifika 17:00-19:00Conservation Time to act for Oceans in the Protected Areas Voyage 17:00-18:00 Implementation From Small IUCN GMPP 17:00-17:30NOAA’s Science SOS - Save Our Species: Good and Restoration of Estuarine, 2030 Agenda: collaborative CEESP 17:00 - 19:00 Beach and Mangrove Habitats: Scale Community-Based Room 311-11 on a Sphere: “Ocean Linkages: news from small grants partnerships for SDG 14 Processes to Multi-National Hawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion B Using Oceanography to IUCN SOS – Save our Species Horseshoe Crabs as a Flagship WWF-International Species Industrial Settings Manage and Conserve Living Species Conservation Pavilion Room 318A NOAA -Room 313B Marine18:00-19:00 Resources”Building Campaigns that Reduce Horseshoe18:30-19:00 NASACrab Specialist Hyperwall: Group Drones that See Through Waves & NOAAPlastics in the Oceans; Canadian Wildlife Federation NewRoom Technologies 311-4 for Ocean Conservation UnitedOceans States & Islands Pavilion Pavilion United States Pavilion

19:30-21:30Island Evening 19:30 - 22:00 Indian Ocean Commission - Oceans & Islands Pavilion

Event Types Key: Pavilion Events Workshop Knowledge Café Other Events

Thematic Journeys: Youth and Young Marine Protected Islands and Blue Economy Pollution Species Law and Policy Professionals Blue Solutions Areas Network Climate Change th Sunday the 4 of September08:30-10:30 08:30-10:30 Îles, changements globaux 09:30-10:00 08:30-10:30 A Wealth of Integrated et conservation 08:30-10:30 08:30-10:30Biodiversity 08:30-10:30 Bringing the High Seas 08:30-13:00Harnessing the 08:30-19:00 NOAA’s Science on a Sphere: Nature at a Scale that Matters:in Voluntary Certification Sharing ICM experience Ocean Assessments – what Ministère de power of environmental Grant Writing Workshop: Coral Bleaching and Other Standards and Labels (food, down to Earth: Multi-sec- do they tell us and what l’Environnement, de communications in the digital Innovative Approaches across the Western Indian toral governance at the Funding, Opportunities Challenges to Coral Health for Long-Term Funding of tourism, forestry, fisheries,Ocean and the Pacific should we do with them? L’Ecologie et des Forêts era to forward conservation and Strategies to fund NOAA 08:30 - 10:30 mining): Impacts on Costa Rica Dome European Bureau for Room 311-2 successes: A hands-on Protected Areas biodiversity and livelihoodsSPC; Agence Française de MarViva Foundation workshop Conservation United States Pavilion WWF Conservation and NOAA IUCN - CEESP & Theme on Développement Room 316B Development IUCN CEC; IUCN Global Water Room 310 the Social and Environmental Room 311-3 Programme Room 301A Accountability of the Private Sector Room 311-12 Room 304B Conservation Campus (SEAPRISE) Conservation Campus Room 317B 10:00-10:30 11:00-13:00 10:30-11:30Connecting People to Natural 11.00-13.00 10:00-10:30 11:00-13:00 In search of resilience: Closing the Plastic Tap and Cultural Marine Heritage Through Island Restoration and reflecting on EbA Wildlife Corridor Designation Policy - Areas of Special11:00-13:00 Places Flamingos - adapting to Biosecurity Connectivity Conservation (ACCs). IUCN changing environments in experiences in Pacific small Oceans11:00-13:00 & Islands Pavilion UnitedHarnessing States the Pavilion power for a Resilient Planet island Species Conservation Pavilion of remote sensing search of healthy, safe and Island Conservation The Intergenerational rich habitats contexts 11:00-13:00 Roadmap to Marine for conservation: An Room 316C SPREP 11:00-13:00 Using blue carbon to introduction to Essential IUCN Pakistan Conservation: catalysing Room 311-7 Room 311-11 Global Environmental Changefoster conservation and innovative multi- Biodiversity Variables Threats to Heritage and Long restoration of coastal stakeholder solutions for and opportunities for 11:00 - 13:00Term Observing Networks of habitats a marine planet at the community input the Past: The Arctic Case andConservation International;crossroads NASA Earth Science Division Beyond The Blue Carbon IUCN WCPA Young Room 311-3 Integrated History and future Initiative; UNESCO – Professionals Marine of People on Earth (IHOPE) Intergovernmental Task Force Room 310 Oceanographic Commission; IUCN Room 311-4 Room 313B

12:30-13:00Tech Corner: Virtual Reefs – A 3D Virtual Reality Tour of Coral Reefs from Drones that See Through Waves 11:00-11:30 12:00-13:00 United States Pavilion 12:00-12:30 Les îles et les changements climatiques : aire marine 12:00-12:30The Global Seabirds at the Crossroads éducative ou comment les élèves des écoles primaires des Local action - global NOAA Fisheries, US 11.30-12.00 Marine Biodiversity learning: Sharing blue îles Marquises ont créé un espace proche-cotier géré de 11:00-13:00 NOAA’s Science on a Department of Commerce façon participative Innovative communication Observation Network solutions from all over the Species Conservation Sphere: Planet (MBON): Biodiversity world Pavilion Event NGO MOTU HAKA, Fédération culturelle et strategies – impacting societyat the Crossroad: Eyes on Pavilion through effective use of media monitoring and capacity GIZ - Oceans & Islands environnementale des îles Marquises our Estuaries building for the global Oceans & Islands Pavilion Blue Frontier Campaign NOAA/TBG Pavilion Room 312 conservation community United States Pavilion United States Pavilion

13:00-14:30Blue Economy - coral reefs matter 13:00-14:30Launch Celebration Lunch: The Loko Ia 13:30 - 14:30International Coral Reef Initiative (ICRI) Secretariat (Hawaiian Fishpond) Restoration Guidebook Oceans & Islands Pavilion Hawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion B 14.30-16.30 14:30-15:00 14:30-16:30 15:30-16:30Island Actions for a Sustainable 14:30-16:30 15:30-16:00 NOAA’s Science on a Sphere: Mapeo de Pueblos Indígenas, Ocean as Heritage: Tech Corner: Áreas Protegidas y EcosistemasCommitments: Progress Ocean Accelerating the role of oceans Coral Reefs in a Changing Naturales en Centroamérica: and Opportunities Moving IUCN in protecting global heritage Papahanaumokuakea 14:30 - 16:30World Lineamientos para Avanzar en Forward Room 310 University of Hawaii, Marine National NOAA la Aplicación del Enfoque de NOAA High-level session Kamakakuokalani Center for Monument United States Pavilion Derechos en la Conservación Hawaiian Studies United States Pavilion Room 314 Hawai‘i-Pacific Room 311-9 UNDP Kauhale Pavilion A Pavilion Event

16:00-16:30Blue Solutions Live Chat: Armelle Jung (western 14:30-16:30What can fishermen’s ecological knowledge contribute in the management of 14:30-16:30Gestión de páramos y humedales en 15.00-15.30How will IMMAs (Important Marine Mammal Areas) and other place-based tools contribute to marinemarine and freshwater systems? Addressing past experiences and future perspectives for Africa) and Carlos Ramón Godínez Reyes (Mexico) Colombia: experiencias y desafíos del agua better fish conservation 19:30-21:30and resources management Oceans & Islands Pavilion Alexander von Humboldt Institute mammal networks and biodiversity conservation? 17.00-19.00 NOAA17:00-19:00 -Oceans & Islands Pavilion Wetlands International/FundaciónBlue Economy: Humedales Conservation (Argentina) Trust - Room Funds 311-7 and other innovative Room 317A Aquaculture and Marine financial instruments for MPAs and marine ecosystems 18:00-19:00 Conservation of intertidal habitats, working coastal Protected Areas 17:00-17:30 17:00-19:00 Engaging Youth and Young wetlands and migratory waterbirds, from the East Asian- Conservation Finance Alliance IUCN Oceans & Islands Pavilion 17:00-17:30 GMPP Highlights – MaldivesSpatial planning for Professionals in Migratory Australasian Flyway, especially the Yellow Sea, to the Room 311-12 NOAA’s Science on a Sphere: IUCN healthy oceans – practical Species Futures global context Marine Mammals & Turtles Oceans & Islands Pavilion experiences for the Canadian Wildlife RSPB 17:00 - 21:30Move Across Ocean Basins protection of vulnerable Federation Room 313B NOAA people and spaces Oceans & Islands United States Pavilion GIZ - Room 317A Pavilion

Event Types Key: Pavilion Events Workshop Knowledge Café Other Events

Thematic Journeys: Youth and Young Marine Protected Islands and Blue Economy Pollution Species Blue Solutions Law and Policy Professionals Areas Network Climate Change Monday the th5 of September 08:30-10:30 08:30-10:30 08:30-10:30 08:30-10:30 08:30-13:00 08:30-10:30 09:30-10:30 From Policy to Implementation Compartiendo conocimientos Marine Community-based Aquaculture and Marine Reef Resilience Indicators, Cultural and Spiritual Significance Water, Culture and Indigenous in the Arctic: Protected sobre las especies amenazadas Management for Food Security Protected Areas Monitoring and Management of Nature in the Management and Connections 08:30 - 10:30 Area Networks as Tools for que integran la Lista Roja and Livelihoods IUCN Application Governance of Protected Areas The Nature Conservancy Conservation and Adaptation to and World Heritage Sites en pesquerías marinas de WWF-International Room 311-15 The Nature Conservancy, Hawai’i IUCN Transformational Change IUCN WCPA Specialist Group on Latinoamérica Room 311-11 Program Water Pavilion Cultural and Spiritual Values of Room 305B US Centro Desarrollo y Pesca Protected Areas Conservation Campus Room 319A Sustenable Room 315 Room 311-9

10:00-10:30 Regional MPA Networks: Contribution to Aichi Target 11 in Regional Seas and sub-regions, and other challenges MedPan Oceans & Islands Pavilion

11:00-13:00 11:00-12:00 12:00-12:30 11:00-11:30 Judges and the Environment II Good Practice for Marine Oil 11:00-13:00 11:00-13:00 11:30-12:00 The Blue CCA Training - Climate Centre for Environmental Legal & Gas Operations: Mitigation On Target? Getting coral reef Power of Spirit: Connecting NOAA’s Science on a Sphere: Locally led tropical marine Communities by Water and change adaptation in coastal andStudies of impacts to biodiversity and reporting from science to policy Tsunami Warning! conservation: a community Sustaining Watersheds through 11:00 - 13:00 marine areas Hawai’i-Pacific Pavilion B ecosystem services CORDIO East Africa/IUCN Coral NOAA conservation music, art and stories Blue Solutions Specialist Group United States Pavilion Blue Ventures Oceans & Islands Pavilion Room 311-7 Fauna & Flora International Hawai’i-Pacific Pavilion B Oceans & Islands Pavilion Room 316B

13:30-14:30Department of Defense Conservation - A Good News 13:00 - 14:30The Challenges and Successes of Marine Species 13:00 - 14:30BEST: Fostering Actions for the largest marine domain13.45-14.15 of 13:30 - 14:30 Story Conservation the world Islands Adapting to a Changing Climate - Hawaii’s Efforts United States Air Force IUCN SSC Shark Specialist Group IUCN Hawai’i Dept. of Land and Natural Resources Press Conference United States Pavilion Species Conservation Pavilion Oceans & Islands Pavilion 15:00 - 15:30 14:30 - 15:30 Room 320 14.30-16:30 EU Overseas, a MPA Network 14:30 - 16:30 Action for Sharks in the Eastern Ocean-wide planning in Pacific 14:30 - 16:30 island countries of Global Importance 14:30-15:30 14:30 - 16:30 People and the Ocean: Tropical Pacific Saving SE Alaska’s Rainforest IUCN Oceania IUCN Siyaya - Youth and Parks Innovating for integrated ocean Integrating Social and Cultural PRETOMA Oceans & Islands Pavilion management at scale Way of Life Dimensions into Large-Scale Hawai’i-Pacific Pavilion A Francois Odendaal Productions United Tribal Transboundary Room 311-11 14:30 - 16:30 #NatureforAll Pavilion WWF-International Ocean Conservation Room 313B Mining Work Group Conservation International & Room 311-8 NOAA Room 315 15:30 - 16:30 16:00-16:30 16:00 - 17:00Achieving Conservation Success Through on the 15:30-16:30 Blue Economy: Blue Carbon - 15:30 - 16:30 The true value of our oceans Sustainable Community Management of Wetlands Leaders of Tomorrow making change today Ground Investments in People and Wildlife IUCN Bangladesh Country Office Examples from the field US Fish & Wildlife Service IUCN Oceania Oceans & Islands Pavilion Punahou School Hawai’i-Pacific Pavilion A Water Pavilion #NatureforAll Pavilion United States Pavilion

17:00-19:00 17:00-19:00 18:00-19:00 17:00-19:00Adaptación al cambio climático y gestión de riesgos 17:00-17:30 Building New Constituencies forLa sécurité alimentaire dans les Partager les outils 17:00-19:00 17:30-18:30 17:00 - 19:00 From Seamounts to the aires marines protégées : réalité et méthodes pragmatiques pour Local Leadership on en la cuenca del Rio de la Plata - un enfoque transfronterizo paraScience for Conservation Conservation accompagner au quotidien les Mozambique Channel: ou utopie ? gestionnaires d’aires marines Sustainability - Aloha+ Challenge la conservación de la biodiversidad y el desarrollo de comunidadesPlanning - Integrating Sea Level Canadian Wildlife resilientes conservation activities in the Oceans & Islands Pavilion Parc National du Banc d’Arguin protégées dans le processus de Hawai‘i-Pacific Pavilion A Rise into Coastal Management South West Indian Ocean Room 311-2 labellisation Liste verte Planning Agence des aires marines protégées Cultura Ambiental, Uruguay Oceans & Islands Pavilion Room 311-12 Room 311-11 United States Pavilion

19:30-21:30 19:00-21:30 19:30-21:30 19:00-19:30 19:00 - 21:30 Bound for achieving Aïchi Target 11 with IMPANA, the World Sharing solutions through the Panorama partnership: Platform Unlocking the billion-dollar business case for landscape scale Virtual Visit to US Marine National Monuments and Sanctuaries Heritage Marine Sites and IMPAC4 launch and celebration restoration Marine National Monuments Program Manager IUCN Oceans & Islands Pavilion US Business Council for Sustainable Development NOAA Protected Planet Pavilion United States Pavilion Business and Biodiversity Pavilion

Event Types Key: Pavilion Events Workshop Knowledge Café Other Events

Thematic Journeys: Youth and Young Marine Protected Islands and Blue Economy Pollution Species Law and Policy Professionals Blue Solutions Areas Network Climate Change Tuesday the 6th of September 11:00-13:00 12:30-13:00 Tech Corner: Virtual One Ocean Reefs – A 3D Virtual 11:00 - 13:00 NOAA/TBG Reality Tour of Coral United States Pavilion Reefs from Drones that See Through Waves NASA United States Pavilion

13:30 - 14:30 13:30-14:30 Engaging the Public in Marine Protected Area Networks NOAA Federal - United States Pavilion

16:00-16:30 14.30-15.00 16:45-18:15 NOAA’s Science on a The challenge of Blue Economy: Blue Carbon Sphere: preserving the health 14:30 - 16:30 - Examples from the field Planet at the Crossroads: of the world’s oceans Conservation Finance Alli- Eyes IUCN on our Estuaries Members assembly - ance NOAA/TBG Ocean Discussion Oceans & Islands Pavilion United States Pavilion Main Plenary

17:00 - 19:00 17:00-17:30 17:30-18:30 NOAA’S Science on a Landscape Conservation Cooperatives in Action Sphere: Tsunami Warning! US Fish & Wildlife Service/ Pacific Islands Climate NOAA Change Cooperative United States Pavilion United States Pavilion

19:30 - 22:00 19:30-21:30 The Mediterranean Sea conservation efforts: Achievements and Challenges Regional Activity Centre for Specially Protected Areas (RAC/SPA) Oceans & Islands Pavilion

Event Types Key: Pavilion Events Workshop Knowledge Café Other Events

Thematic Journeys: Youth and Young Marine Protected Islands and Blue Economy Pollution Species Blue Solutions Law and Policy Professionals Association’s Network Climate Change Images Used In Order of Appearance Cover photo: Seapics Background and page 2: Sebastià Semene Guitart Page 3: Copyright M. Edwards Friday 2nd of September: Craig Dahlgren Saturday 3rd September: Ameer Abdulla Sunday 4th September: Ron McPeak Monday 5th September: Sebastià Semene Guitart Tuesday 6th September: Bill Miller (Fish) Angel shark backgound: Simon Rogerson Background staff photo: Ameer Abdulla

In cooperation with IO M ON UN M D RI T IA

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H O E M R I E T IN AG O E • PATRIM United Nations World Educational, Scientific and Heritage Un établissement public Cultural Organization Centre pour la protection du milieu marin

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SEVENSEA S fb

The IUCN GMPP in Hawai’i

The IUCN Global Marine & Polar Programme comprises of 40 staff working in 9 countries on ten broad themes: Climate Change Mitigation & Adaptation, Coastal Livelihoods, Conserving , Energy & Industry, Fisheries & Aqua- culture, Marine Plastics, Coral Reefs, Polar Conservation, Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) and Ocean Governance. Olivia Meylan Dan Laffoley Carl Gustaf Lundin Administrative Assistant Principal Advisor, Marine Science Director, Global Marine and Polar IUCN Headquarters Gland, and Conservation Programme Switzerland. Peterborough, UK IUCN Headquarters Gland, [email protected] [email protected] Switzerland. [email protected]

Alexis McGivern Professor John Baxter Carole Martinez Junior Professional Principal Advisor Programme Coordinator, Regional IUCN Headquarters Gland, Marine, Scottish Natural Seas/EU Switzerland. Heritage [email protected] Overseas Edinburgh, Scotland IUCN Headquarters Gland, [email protected] Switzerland. [email protected]

Maximilian Vermilye David Freestone James Oliver Junior Professional Executive Director, Programme Operations Officer [email protected] Sargasso Sea Alliance IUCN Headquarters Gland, Washington DC, USA Switzerland. dfreestone@ [email protected] sargassoseacommission.org

Giacomo Abrusci Francois Odendaal Anete Berzina Editor-in-Chief of SEVENSEAS Magazine Manager - Western Gray Whale/SEIC Eco-Africa and Francois Odendaal and Americas Regional Program Officer, Productions Project Global Marine Programme IUCN Headquarters Gland, Switzerland. Giacomo@sevenseastravelmagazine. Cape Town, Pretoria [email protected] com South Africa

Whitney Berry Laura Cassiani Nicolas Gruner Marine Project Officer US Fundraising Communications Associate IUCN Headquarters Gland, IUCN Headquarters Gland, Switzerland. [email protected] Switzerland. Whitneyberry07@gmail. com [email protected]

Ameer Abdulla Mattias Klum Raphaelle Flint Senior Advisor and Chief of IUCN Goodwill Ambassador Marine Project Officer Party / Chief Technical Officer. Uppsala, Sweden IUCN Headquarters Gland, Switzerland. IUCN Spain & Maldives. [email protected] [email protected]

Munshidha Ibrahim Nilufer Oral Pierre-Yves Cousteau Community Engagement Liason Marine Programme Officer IUCN Maldives IUCN Council Focal Point for IUCN Headquarters [email protected] Oceans Gland, Switzerland. [email protected] [email protected]

Elisabeth Kjellqvist Bonnie DeJoseph Administrative Assistant IUCN Head- Masters of Marine Affairs Luc Cuyvers quarters Gland, Switzerland. 2014 Sea Grant Knauss Marine Policy Author, Lecturer, Filmographer Elisabeth.Kjellqvist Fellow. [email protected] @iucn.org [email protected]

Christophe Lefèbvre Marie Fischborn Sylvie Goyet Agence des Aires Marines Protégées, Programme Officer, SPC Director, Environmental IUCN Protected Area Solutions IUCN Sustainability and Climate Change [email protected] IUCN Headquarters Gland, [email protected] Switzerland [email protected]

Marine Journey Designer: Josephine Vermilye Marine Journey Editor: Alexis McGivern