Continuing A Tradition Of Ocean Stewardship
Scuba Diver|Issue 02-2017 (108)

An interview with Palau President Tommy Remengesau Jr.

David Helvarg
Continuing A Tradition Of Ocean Stewardship

After helping to establish the world’s first shark sanctuary in his nation’s waters in 2009, President Tommy Remengesau Jr. of the Republic of Palau signed legislation last year that set aside 80 percent of his small west Pacific island nation’s ocean as a fully protected marine sanctuary. The world’s sixth-largest reserve, the Palau sanctuary covers an area larger than California and has the greatest percentage of any nation’s waters off limits to fishing.

“Creating this sanctuary is a bold move that the people of Palau recognise as essential to our survival,” Remengesau explained. To protect this vast tract, he also signed an international treaty targeting illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing. “Palau will not tolerate poachers in our ocean,” he warned. His administration followed up on that warning by confiscating and burning vessels from Vietnam and the Philippines caught illegally fishing in Palau’s waters.

In May 2016 Remengesau was awarded the Peter Benchley Ocean Award for Excellence in National Stewardship. In June, David Helvarg visited Palau and interviewed Remengesau for Alert Diver.

Alert Diver: What led Palau to become a world leader in ocean conservation?

Tommy Remengesau Jr.: Ocean conservation is very much a part of our tradition and livelihood, and we know to sustain our future existence as island people we must balance Nature and development.

AD: What in your own life brought you to the idea of ocean stewardship?

This story is from the Issue 02-2017 (108) edition of Scuba Diver.

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This story is from the Issue 02-2017 (108) edition of Scuba Diver.

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