On December 2020, the GEF/UNDP/PEMSEA Project on Scaling Up the Implementation of the SDS-SEA reached its productive conclusion. The project represented the concluding phase of GEF’s intervention since 1993, which aimed to reduce pollution and rebuild degraded marine resources in Cambodia, PR China, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Philippines, Thailand, Timor-Leste and Viet Nam that share six LMEs, and related catchment areas, including the sustainability of PEMSEA as the regional coordinating mechanism for the implementation of the SDS-SEA. The project also made a stronger linkage between sustainable development of river basins, coastal and marine areas and local, national and regional investment processes to promote blue economy in the SEA.
The overall project target was to extend ICM programs to cover 20 percent of the regional coastline. In 2020, ICM programs across the SEA have covered an estimated 40 percent of the regional coastline, which included the scaled-up national and local ICM programs in 12 countries (i.e., Cambodia, China, DPR Korea, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Philippines, RO Korea, Singapore, Thailand, Timor-Leste and Viet Nam), including the ICM sites that were directly supported by the SDS-SEA Project.
The 40 percent coastline covered by the ICM program is home to important habitats such as coral reefs, mangroves, seagrasses and wetlands that provide critical ecosystem goods and services that fuel sustainable growth and development of the countries in the SEA. Through the project, technical interventions using the ICM core and specialized tools, methods and approaches along with the necessary enabling policies, institutional and legal reforms, strategies and plans, and initiatives at national and local levels combined with strategic partnerships and networking have increased the coverage of healthy and resilient coastal habitats with effective and sustainable management systems.