Indonesia and the Philippines are lead country partners
Within Southeast Asia, Indonesia and the Philippines are leading partners in this project. Both countries share the following similarities: they are located within the Coral Triangle; have coastal communities that rely on fisheries for their livelihoods; are tied to global international shipping; and both countries rely on their coastal waters for new industries such as aquaculture and ecotourism.
In Indonesia, a range of agencies from transportation, fisheries, the environment, science and academe have partnered together as part of this initiative. The first envisioned step is the carrying out of a port biological baseline survey. The lack of information in the region is a challenge for understanding the issue of biofouling, and such surveys will go a long way towards tackling this.
The Philippines has similarly brought together a range of organizations and academic institutions, with the focal point being the Maritime Industry Authority (MARINA). There are currently no biofouling-related regulations in the country, and no reliable and cohesive data on marine invasive species. To address this, the Philippines is now preparing a national plan of action to deal with the issue of biofouling.
On 14 December 2020, representatives from the Philippines will participate in the first online General Training Course on Biofouling Management, carried out by GloFouling Partnerships, which ran for 4 days, 3 hours each, and with virtual breakout sessions.
GloFouling Partnerships, which started in December 2018, will run for five years until the end of 2023. Total cost of the GloFouling Partnerships is approximately US$49 million, with the funds to be used to deliver a range of governance reforms at the national level via capacity building activities, training workshops, demonstration sites and technology adoption.