CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME
UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME
THE ACTION PLAN FOR THE CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT
PROGRAMME: EVALUATION OF ITS DEVELOPMENT AND
ACHIEVEMENTS (1976-1987)
CEP TECHNICAL REPORT NO. 1
1989
Note: This document was prepared by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
under projects FP/5102-86-02 and FP/CR/5102-86-05 as the response to the decision of the
Fourth Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment
Programme and the First Meeting of Contracting Parties to the Convention for the Protection and
Development of the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean Region (Guadeloupe, 26-28
October 1987) to initiate an in-depth evaluation of the achievements and shortcomings of the
Action Plan since its inception (1976) and to provide a basis for a comprehensive long-term
strategy for the future development of the Action Plan. The draft of the evaluation was presented
and reviewed at the Seventh Meeting of the Monitoring Committee on the Action Plan and
Special Meeting of the Bureau of Contracting Parties to the Convention for the Caribbean
Environment Programme
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................................................1
STEPS IN THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ACTION PLAN...............................3
ACHIEVEMENTS ......................................................................................................................................................6
DIFFICULTIES...........................................................................................................................................................7
GENERAL....................................................................................................................................................................7
INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS ...............................................................................................................................8
FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS ....................................................................................................................................12
TRAINING AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ....................................................................................................18
SUMMARY................................................................................................................................................................19
ANNEX I ANALYSIS OF ACTIVITIES CARRIED OUT IN THE FRAMEWORK OF THE ACTION PLAN
.....................................................................................................................................................................................21
ANNEX II LIST OF FOCAL POINTS OF THE CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME...............43
ANNEX III MEETINGS CONVENED WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OF THE ACTION PLAN FOR THE
CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME .................................................................................................55
ANNEX IV COUNTRY PARTICIPANTS AND/OR TRAINEES IN WORKSHOPS, MEETINGS OR
SEMINARS OF THE ACTION PLAN FOR THE CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME............62
ANNEX V TECHNICAL PUBLICATIONS AND REPORTS DEVELOPED WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK
OF THE CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME .................................................................................82
List of Figures
1. Attendance at Intergovernmental and Monitoring Committee Meetings of the Caribbean
Environment Programme 1981-1987
2. Pledges and Payments to Caribbean Trust Fund 1982-1987 (As of 31 December 1987)
3. Distribution of Support from all Sources to Different Elements of the Action Plan 1976-1987
4. Appropriations for Programme Implementation from Caribbean Trust Fund 1983-1987
List of Tables
TABLE 1. STATUS OF THE CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION AND DEVELOPMENT OF
THEMARINE ENVIRONMENT OF THE WIDER CARIBBEAN REGION AND THE PROTOCOL
CONCERNING CO-OPERATION IN COMBATING OIL SPILLS IN THE WIDER CARIBBEAN
REGION (AS OF 31 DECEMBER 1988)..................................................................................................................10
TABLE 2: STATUS OF PLEDGES AND RECEIVED CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE CARIBBEAN TRUST
FUND IN US$ (AS OF 31 DECEMBER 1987) .......................................................................................................13
TABLE 3. COMMITMENTS AND EXPENDITURES FROM DIFFERENT SOURCES TO SUPPORT THE
DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ACTION PLAN FOR THE CARIBBEAN
ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME (1975-1989) (AS OF 6 NOVEMBER 1989)..................................................15
TABLE 4. APPROPRIATIONS OF CTF RESOURCES BY INTERGOVERNMENTAL AND
MONITORING COMMITTEE MEETINGS.........................................................................................................17
THE ACTION PLAN FOR THE CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME:
EVALUATION OF ITS DEVELOPMENT AND ACHIEVEMENTS
INTRODUCTION
1. The development of the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment Programme was
initiated in 1974, at the request of several Caribbean governments, by Decision 8(II) of the
Second Session of the Governing Council of UNEP (UNEP/GC/2/6, Annex I, Section A4).
2. The geographic coverage of the Caribbean Environment Programme comprises all of the
insular and coastal States and territories of the Caribbean Sea, the Gulf of Mexico and their
adjacent waters, from the U.S. Gulf coast states and the islands of the Bahamian chain,
south to the French Department of Guiana.
3. Its development was requested since it was recognized that a regional co-operative approach
was most suitable to address the growing concern for conservation, protection and
development of the marine and coastal resources of the region.
4. Six years after the adoption of the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment Programme
in Montego Bay, April 1981, the Fourth Intergovernmental Meeting, held in Guadeloupe
from 26 to 28 October 1987, decided that an in-depth evaluation should be initiated, to
assess the achievements and shortcomings of the Action Plan since its inception, and to
provide the basis for the formulation of a comprehensive long-term strategy for its future
development.
5. The present document constitutes an in-depth evaluation of the Action Plan for the
Caribbean Environment Programme. It covers the preparatory activities initiated in 1976
leading to its adoption in April 1981, and its implementation until the end of 1987.
6. In evaluating the Caribbean Action Plan, the following issues have been examined:
(a) the influence of the Action Plan on the development and implementation of policies for
the protection, conservation and development of marine resources, at national and
regional levels;
(b) the extent to which the Action Plan has favoured, directly and indirectly, a heightened
awareness of the environment-development issues in both decision-makers and the
general public;
(c) the role the Action Plan has played in fostering co-operation between participating
countries to develop and strengthen national environmental management capabilities;
(d)
the importance of the Action Plan in triggering the adoption by national institutions of
harmonized methodologies for assessing pollution and other environmental problems;
and
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(e) the level of success of the Action Plan in stimulating public interest in, and awareness
of environmental matters as well as the development of training programmes in the
region on matters related to environmental management and protection.
7. The accomplishments of the Caribbean Action Plan were looked at in light of the above
issues, focusing on the level of success that has been achieved in the attainment of the
principal objectives of the Plan, that is, "to assist the Governments of the Wider Caribbean
Region in minimizing environmental problems through assessment and environmental
management and to strengthen co-operation in environmental matters..." (UNEP Regional
Seas Reports and Studies No. 26).
8. The following specific criteria were used to ascertain the achievements of the Action Plan:
- the mobilization of financial and manpower resources of nations in the region for the
support of the Action Plan;
- the enactment, implementation and enforcement of national and international legislation
and policies on environment, prompted directly or indirectly by the Action Plan;
- the level of participation of national institutions in the development and implementation
of the Action Plan;
- the nature, magnitude and quality of training provided through the Action Plan;
- the efficiency of technical meetings held in the framework of the Action Plan to
improve exchange of scientific data and promote co-ordinated management strategies;
- the level of participation by regional and international organizations, measured by the
degree of substantive and financial support provided for the implementation o f regional
co-operative environmental actions within the framework of the Action Plan;
- the level of community participation in the decision-making process with respect to
resource exploitation and conservation; and
- the amount and quality of scientific data as well as the information and educational
materials generated by the Action Plan.
9. This evaluation has been prepared by the Secretariat of the Action Plan (UNEP) on the basis
of information available in files supplied throughout the years by the collaborating national
and international institutions.
10. The preparation of the evaluation has been co-ordinated by the Oceans and Coastal Areas
Programme Activity Centre (OCA/PAC) of UNEP, with the generous assistance of UNEP's
Regional Office for Latin America and the Caribbean (ROLAC), and essential input of its
staff (Mr. Arsenio Rodríguez), which is hereby gratefully acknowledged.
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STEPS IN THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF
THE ACTION PLAN
11. The development of the Action Plan was initiated by a preparatory activity, undertaken by a
Project Co-ordinator, operating from UNEP's Regional Office for Latin America and the
Caribbean in Mexico City from April 1976 to March 1977 (CEP-1) *.
12. In December 1976, shortly after the initiation of the preparatory activity, UNEP, FAO and
IOC, co-sponsored an International Workshop on Marine Pollution in the Caribbean and
Adjacent Regions, in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, to assess marine pollution
problems in the region (CEP-2).
13. In February 1977, the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean
(ECLAC) reached an agreement with UNEP to carry out a joint project to develop an
Action Programme for Sound Environmental Management in the Wider Caribbean (CEP-3).
14. In April of that same year a project office was established by ECLAC in Port of Spain,
Trinidad.
15. Between August 1977 to July 1978, ample consultations were undertaken with
governmental and non-governmental institutions to assess the environmental management
priorities of the region.
16. The results of the consultations as well as the review of a preliminary programme of
priorities were reviewed in August 1978 by an advisory panel of high level regional experts.
17. Sectoral technical overviews assessing the environmental problems of the Caribbean were
prepared from November 1978 to July 1979 by the ECLAC/UNEP Project Unit in
collaboration with FAO, UNIDO, WHO/PAHO, UN/DIESA, IUCN, IOC, IMO and OAS.
18. A synthesis of the overviews, including elements for an Action Plan was prepared by
UNEP(RS/PAC) in July 1979 and was reviewed by the Advisory Panel in November 1979.
19. The draft Action Plan was reviewed by two meetings of Government-nominated experts,
held in Caracas (January 1980) and Managua (February 1981) prior to its adoption by the
First Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment
Programme which was held in Montego Bay, Jamaica, in April 1981. The meeting
identified a programme of priorities for the implementation of the Action Plan, established a
Trust Fund to help support its activities, and decided that a regional legal agreement should
be developed.
20. The ECLAC Project Unit in Port of Spain was closed in June 1981 and UNEP, through
RS/PAC, assumed total responsibility as Secretariat of the Action Plan.
* The references in parentheses relate to the projects listed in Annex I entitled "Analysis of activities carried out in
the framework of the Action Plan".
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21. The draft regional legal agreements were prepared by RS/PAC, in consultation with
Governments of the region, and reviewed by meetings of Government-nominated legal
experts in New York (December 1981 and July 1982).
22. The First Meeting of the Monitoring Committee of the Caribbean Action Plan took place in
New York, in December 1981. The meeting authorized the implementation, in co-operation
with CCA, IMO, CARICOM and WHO/PAHO, of selected priority projects on:
environmental education; oil spill contingency planning; and environmental health (CEP-7,
8 and 9). The projects, initiated in mid-1982, were undertaken within the context of the
Action Plan and were supported by UNEP's Environment Fund, and counterpart
contributions from agencies and government sources (at this time the CTF was not yet
operational).
23. The Conference of Plenipotentiaries on the Protection and Development of the Marine
Environment of the Wider Caribbean Region was held in Cartagena, 21-24 March 1983.
Thirteen governments subscribed to the following agreements: (i) the Convention for the
Protection and Development of the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean Region;
and (ii) the Protocol concerning Co-operation in Combating Oil Spills in the Wider
Caribbean Region. It is to be noted that the European Economic Community has only
ratified the Convention and not the Protocol. In addition, the conference adopted
resolutions on the relationship between the Convention, Protocol and Action Plan and on
the need to elaborate additional protocols on pollution from land-based sources and
specially protected areas and wildlife. Additionally, on this occasion, the Second Meeting
of the Monitoring Committee and the Second Intergovernmental Meeting were held from
18-19 March and 24-26 March 1983, respectively.
24. The Caribbean Trust Fund (CTF) became operational in September 1983 when it reached
the minimum level of US$ 250,000 prescribed by its terms of reference, and as a result of
this, the Third Meeting of the Monitoring Committee on the Caribbean Action Plan which
was held in Havana, Cuba in November 1983, allocated US$ 636,000 from the CTF for the
immediate implementation of projects on oil spill contingency, coastal pollution monitoring,
environment and tourism, training and development of impact assessment methodologies
(CEP-6, 7, 9, 11, 12, 14, 15, 16).
25. In April 1985, the Third Intergovernmental Meeting on the Caribbean Action Plan held in
Cancún, Mexico, allocated US$ 627,600 for the immediate implementation of projects, and
US$ 170,000 for co-ordination activities including the establishment of the Regional Co-
ordinating Unit (RCU)(CEP-GEN, CEP-7, 15, 18, 23 and 24). It also approved a priority
list of projects to be implemented as funds became available. Of these, CEP-19, CEP-20,
CEP-21 and CEP-22 have already been initiated. Additionally, the Fourth Meeting of the
Monitoring Committee held on this occasion studied various alternatives for the
establishment of the Regional Co-ordinating Unit (RCU).
26. The RCU became operational on 1 September 1986 in Kingston and formally inaugurated
on 11 May 1987 by the Prime Minister of Jamaica and the Executive Director of UNEP.
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On this occasion, the Fifth Meeting of the Monitoring Committee was held and provided the
Secretariat with guidance on the financial, institutional, legal and organizational aspects
relevant to the future implementation of the Action Plan and the Cartagena Convention.
27. The Cartagena Convention and its associated Protocol entered into force on 11 October
1986 with 9 countries ratifying these instruments (Barbados, France, Mexico, Netherlands,
St. Lucia, Trinidad and Tobago, United Kingdom, United States of America and
Venezuela). Subsequently, Antigua and Barbuda, Colombia, Cuba, Grenada, Jamaica and
Panama ratified and/or acceded to these instruments.
28. The First Meeting of the Contracting Parties to the Convention was held in Guadeloupe,
France from 26 to 28 October 1987, together with the Fourth Intergovernmental Meeting on
the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment Programme. The Fourth Intergovernmental
Meeting decided inter alia: that the implementation of the Action Plan should concentrate
"on activities of regional relevance addressing the common problems of the Caribbean
region"; and requested an in-depth evaluation of the Action Plan and a reassessment of the
region's environmental problems in order that a comprehensive long-term strategy for the
future development of the Plan be formulated. The Meeting also approved activities for up
to US$ 2,103,300 to be implemented in four wide subject areas, during the 1988-1989
biennium: co-ordination, information and institutional development; environmental
management of coastal and marine resources; assessment and control of marine pollution;
and environmental training, education and public awareness. Prior to the Fourth
Intergovernmental Meeting, the Sixth Meeting of the Monitoring Committee was held in
Guadeloupe, France from 21-23 October 1987.
29. The Meeting of Experts on the Caribbean Environment Programme which was held in
Mexico City, 7-9 September 1988, was convened with the following objectives: (a) to
review and revise as appropriate, the draft "Regional Overview of Environmental Problems
and Priorities Affecting the Coastal and Marine Resources of the Wider Caribbean"
(UNEP(OCA)/CAR WG.1/3); (b) to review and comment on the draft "Action Plan for the
Caribbean Environment Programme: Evaluation of its Development and Achievements"
(UNEP(OCA)/CAR WG.1/4); and (c) to propose concrete region-wide programmes which
may constitute parts of a comprehensive long-term strategy for the future development of
the Caribbean Environment Programme.
30. The meeting recommended that the Regional Co-ordinating Unit undertakes the finalization
of document UNEP(OCA)/CAR WG.1/4 incorporating the necessary modifications in order
for the document to become a major fundraising instrument for the Programme. This
recommendation was adopted by the Seventh Meeting of the Monitoring Committee on the
Action Plan and Special Meeting of the Bureau of Contracting Parties to the Convention for
the Caribbean Environment Programme (Mexico City, 12-14 September 1988).
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ACHIEVEMENTS
31. One of the most significant accomplishments of the Caribbean Environment Programme has
been the creation of a framework for dialogue and co-operation on sustainable development,
management and protection of the resources of the region, in spite of the striking political,
cultural and socio-economic diversity that characterizes the Wider Caribbean region.
32. The adoption and ratification by a wide range of Parties, in spite of prevailing regional
conflicts, of two regional legal agreements for the protection of marine resources, is an
unprecedented event which vouches for the usefulness of this framework.
33. The Action Plan brought together, both in the preparatory and implementation phases, a
considerable number of high level Government officials responsible for formulating and
implementing policies on environment and on natural resource management.
34. During the development and implementation phases of the Action Plan, numerous national
and technical focal points have become actively involved in the identification of the region's
environmental priorities (see Annex II). Additionally, numerous intergovernmental and
non-governmental organizations have contributed to the Action Plan's development. This
concerted pioneering effort to analyze the environment of the region, constituted a very
successful exercise of international co-operation that led to the formulation of the
management strategies which are the basis of the Action Plan. Furthermore, it yielded
important information on the state of the environment of the region.
35. By the end of 1987, twenty-four specific projects stemming directly from the Action Plan
had been completed or were in progress. These have already generated significant results in
terms of: baseline studies; directories; management guidelines; educational materials;
training of scientific and technical personnel; and institutional build-up (see Annex I).
36. The Action Plan has been quite successful in launching wide reaching media campaigns,
publishing educational materials and promoting national educational and public awareness
programmes in several countries of the region (see analysis of CEP-9 in Annex I). However,
it is difficult to quantify the impact of these activities in heightening public awareness of
environmental issues.
37. The Caribbean Action Plan has been influential in promoting scientific and technical
exchange among the national institutions of the region. In several instances, this has
resulted in the adoption of common methodological approaches, for monitoring and
managing environmental problems in the region. Relevant examples of the application of
this approach relates to the monitoring of marine pollution and procedures for combating oil
spills.
38. Approximately 600 scientific and technical personnel have been trained in various aspects
of monitoring and managing environmental problems (see Annex IV). The training
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provided through the Action Plan has been a significant contributory factor in strengthening
the capabilities of participating national institutions.
39. Considerable scientific data and publications have been directly or indirectly generated by
the Action Plan. Annex V presents a selection of technical publications and reports
developed within the framework of the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment
Programme.
40. National focal points for the Action Plan were identified by every participating Government
(see Annex II). These were instrumental, in many instances, in encouraging the
establishment of interministerial co-ordination mechanisms to guide the implementation of
environmental management policies, identified by the Plan, at both national and regional
levels.
41. The Action Plan has been moderately successful in mobilizing financial resources, inside
and outside the region to support environmental projects. The principal financial conduits
have been the Caribbean Trust Fund, the Environment Fund of UNEP and counterpart
contributions provided by participating countries as well as partner organizations.
DIFFICULTIES
General
42. The preparatory and development phases of the Action Plan were exceptionally long (1976-
1981) and costly (about 2 million US dollars including an estimated 0.5 million spent by
UNEP Regional Seas Programme in direct and indirect support). However, the initial task
was a formidable one. There was no consensus among Government officials and scientists
as to what type of Action Plan was needed; some wanted a comprehensive master plan,
addressing the broad issues of environment and development; others, a plan focusing on
concrete issues, like monitoring and managing marine and coastal pollution, or protecting
endangered species. There was no agreement either with respect to the need for regional
legal accords, or a regional trust fund.
43. Extensive consultations and negotiations were required to achieve a consensus and to obtain
the political support which was essential for a successful regional programme. Previous
activities of a similar nature in the region, which had focused only on the incorporation of
technical institutions and scientists, failed because they did not obtain official and political
backing from Governments.
44. In addition to the need for extensive consultations and the lack of definition as to the nature
of the programme itself, another factor which contributed to the slow motion of the
development phase, was the complicated fashion in which the project was managed. Based
in Port of Spain, it was administered from ECLAC, Santiago, supervised programmatically
from UNEP Headquarters in Nairobi and OCA/PAC in Geneva.
- 8 -
45. The principal objective of the Action Plan is to promote regional co-operation to address
common environmental concerns. Recognizing this, the Intergovernmental Meeting which
adopted the Plan in 1981, established as programme priorities those projects that had a
"common interest" (see Annex I). In spite of this, there was a growing tendency to - allocate
funds from the CTF to support projects that can hardly be classified as regional projects or
as national projects having a regional significance.
46. Moreover, project proposals presented by Governments have been in some instances,
technically deficient, requiring a lengthy revision process prior to final approval by UNEP.
Even then, some projects still lack proper focus to produce useful outputs. One reason for
this, is that national scientific institutions seldom participate in the process of project
development and implementation. In some cases, the national environmental
administrations develop and implement the projects themselves, overlooking the valuable
technical input that could be provided by their research institutions.
47. Many of the projects have been carried out in an isolated fashion, without taking advantage
of related activities being undertaken in the same subject area by other programmes.
Furthermore, for most projects, no follow-up provisions are planned.
48. As in any other developing programme, the enthusiasm of dedicated individuals, well
informed about its activities and requirements, is an important factor in maintaining
progress at a constant pace. Frequent changes of the national focal points responsible for
following-up the Action Plan, as well as changes in the international personnel in charge of
the co-ordination have resulted in significant setbacks in its implementation.
49. The implementation of the Caribbean Action Plan during its initial phase, failed to establish
effective co-operative links with other programmes, sponsored by multilateral and bilateral
sources, which are pursuing similar objectives in the region. This is primarily due to the fact
that Governments participating in the Action Plan have not promoted it among their own
institutions, nor actively requested at the different international fora, that it be considered as
a framework to co-ordinate all regional activities on environment.
Institutional Arrangements
50. The overall authority for the Caribbean Action Plan rests in the biennial intergovernmental
meetings. Four of these meetings have been held in the life of the Action Plan:
- First Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment
Programme, Montego Bay, 6-8 April 1981;
- Second Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment
Programme, Cartagena de Indias, 24-26 March 1983;
- Third Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment
Programme, Cancún, 24-26 April 1985; and
- Fourth
Intergovernmental
Meeting on the Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment
Programme and First Meeting of Contracting Parties to the Convention for the Protection and
Development of the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean Region, Guadeloupe, 26-
28 October 1987.
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51. The Monitoring Committee was established by t! he First Intergovernmental Meeting, to
provide overall guidance to the Secretariat on the implementation of the Plan, and to
periodically review its progress and approve project proposals to be financed by the CTF.
The Committee has had seven sessions: New York 1981 (December); Cartagena 1983
(March); Havana 1983 (November); Cancún 1985 (April); Kingston 1987 (May);
Guadeloupe 1987 (October); and Mexico 1988 (September). Annex III presents a complete
list of meetings convened within the framework of the Action Plan for the Caribbean
Environment Programme.
52. The same meeting decided on the establishment of a Regional Co-ordinating Unit,
administered by UNEP, and located in Kingston, Jamaica, to provide the technical co-
ordination for the various programme activities and act as the Secretariat of the Action Plan.
53. The establishment of the RCU was significantly delayed pending the ratification of the
necessary legal agreements by the Government of Jamaica and the availability of funds in
the CTF to support its operation. Despite the economic difficulties facing the country, it is
important to note the significant contribution of the Government of Jamaica towards the
establishment of the RCU in Kingston. The offices of the RCU became operational in
September 1986 and the recruitment of a basic core staff was finalized by January 1987. A
significant achievement of the Plan has been the fact that poor countries recognize the
importance of regional co-operation as a means of achieving sustainable development.
54. Thirty-five States and territories of the Wider Caribbean region as well as the European
Economic Community have participated in the Caribbean Action Plan. Several have failed
to attend meetings, a number of countries have never contributed to the Caribbean Trust
Fund and as of 31 December 1988, fifteen countries have ratified the legal agreements (see
Table 1). The attendance to Intergovernmental and Monitoring Committee meetings has
been irregular prior to the Guadeloupe meetings (see Figure 1).
FIG. 1. ATTENDANCE AT INTERGOVERNMENTAL AND MONITORING COMMITTEE
MEETINGS OF THE CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME 1981-1987
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TABLE 1. STATUS OF THE CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION AND
DEVELOPMENT OF THEMARINE ENVIRONMENT OF THE WIDER CARIBBEAN
REGION AND THE PROTOCOL CONCERNING CO-OPERATION IN COMBATING
OIL SPILLS IN THE WIDER CARIBBEAN REGION (AS OF 31 DECEMBER 1988)
State Convention
Protocol
signed
ratified
signed ratified
or acceded(1)
or acceded(1)
Antigua and Barbuda
-
11 September 86 -
11 September 86
Bahamas
-
Barbados
5 March 84
28 May 85
5 March 84
28 May 85
Belize
-
-
-
-
Colombia
24 March 83
3 March 88
24 March 83
3 March 88
Costa Rica
-
-
-
-
Cuba
-
15 September 88
-
15 September 88
Dominica
-
-
-
-
Dominican Republic
-
-
-
-
European Economic
24 March 83
-
24 March 83
-
Community
France (2)
24 March 83
13 November 85
24 March 83
13 November 85
Grenada
24 March 83
30 May 85
24 March 83
17 August 87
Guatemala
5 July 83
-
5 July 83
-
Guyana
-
-
-
-
Haiti
-
-
-
-
Honduras
24 March 83
-
24 March 83
-
Jamaica
24 March 83
1 April 87
24 March 83
1 April 87
Mexico
24 March 83
9 April 85
24 March 83
9 April 85
Netherlands (3)
24 March 83
16 April 84
24 March 83
16 April 84
Nicaragua
24 March 83
-
24 March 83
-
Panama
24 March 83
7 October 87
24 March 83
7 October 87
St. Kitts and Nevis
-
-
-
-
Saint Lucia
24 March 83
30 September 84
24 March 83
30 September 84
Saint Vincent and the -
-
-
-
Grenadines
Suriname
-
-
-
-
Trinidad and Tobago
-
24 January 86
-
24 January 86
United Kingdom (4)
24 March 83
28 February 86
24 March 83
28 February 86
United States of America 24 March 83
31 October 84
24 March 83
31 October 84
Venezuela
24 March 83
18 December 86
24 March 83
18 December 86
(1) Date of deposit of instruments of ratification or accession with Government of Colombia.
(2) Signed with reserve.
(3) Ratified on behalf of Aruba and the Netherland Antilles Federation.
(4) Ratified on behalf of the Cayman Islands, the Turks and Caicos and the British Virgin. Islands reserving the
right to extend it at a future date to include the other territories.
Note from the Secretariat: the other territories of the United Kingdom participating in the Caribbean Environment
Programme are Anguilla and Montserrat.
NOTE: The Convention and Protocol entered into force on 11 October 1986.
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55. The periodic meetings of the Monitoring Committee have been an effective device in
supervising the general direction of the programme. However, these meetings are a weak
mechanism for the technical evaluation of project proposals and the assessment of the
results of on-going projects.
56. It is to be noted that UNEP did not carry out an effective monitoring of the numerous
projects that came on stream starting in 1984. Furthermore, it failed to properly evaluate
the technical soundness of many of the proposals submitted to the Monitoring Committee
prior to project implementation.
57. Prior to the establishment of the RCU, there was a tendency for projects to be assigned to
Governments for implementation rather than to regional or international agencies. It is the
opinion of the Secretariat that implementation of projects under the Caribbean Environment
Programme requires close collaboration between n) ational institutions and international
organizations in order to achieve the objectives of the Programme.
58. At the time that different alternatives for staffing the RCU were being considered, UNEP
informed the Monitoring Committee (UNEP/IG.46/4) that the minimum operational level of
the Unit would be: a co-ordinator, one senior programme officer, an administrative assistant
and two bilingual secretaries. Based on this information, the Third Intergovernmental
Meeting approved a proposal for the establishment of the RCU (UNEP/IG.55/4, Annex
VII). The proposal requested UNEP to finance the co-ordinator and a secretary for a period
of two years with the understanding that "Governments/organizations of the Wider
Caribbean will sponsor an experienced professional for the RCU on a rotating basis for a
minimum period of one year...", and that the Government of Jamaica would furnish the rest
of personnel. UNEP, the Government of Jamaica, the United States of America and the
Netherlands have provided personnel to the RCU.
59. The interim co-ordination provided by UNEP through its Regional Seas Programme,
slackened after the Third Intergovernmental Meeting (Cancún, 24-26 April 1985). From
then on, until late 1986, UNEP's follow-up of the Plan virtually came to a standstill. As a
by-product, Governments as well as international organizations lost interest in the
programme. This was compounded by the appointment, during this period, of many new
national focal points, who did not receive any briefing from UNEP as to the status of the
programme and its future activities.
60. The Unit started its operation below the minimum functional level, with a fully loaded
programme: twenty on-going projects; two legal agreements in force; and a subsequent
request for the development of additional protocols. Furthermore, an in-depth evaluation
process of the Caribbean Action Plan has been undertaken, together with the formulation of
a comprehensive long-term strategy for the future development of the Plan.
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Financial Arrangements
61. Financial support for the activities agreed upon as part of the Caribbean Action Plan were
envisaged as originating from several sources:
(a) Voluntary
contributions
from States and territories participating in the Action Plan;
(b) Voluntary contributions from States supporting the Action Plan but not participating in
it;
(c) From the United Nations system; and
(d) From the regional, subregional and international organizations which are not part of
the United Nations system.
62. All these contributions could be in cash or in kind (staff time, experts, training, facilities,
services, etc.). The Action Plan defined two mechanisms as channels to receive cash
contributions:
(a) A Caribbean Regional Trust Fund (CTF) to cover common cost expenses (co-
ordination, meetings, etc.) and the costs of activities of general interest to all
participants in the Action Plan; and
(b) Contributions to specific activities agreed upon as part of the Action Plan.
63. The Action Plan clearly stipulates that "the ultimate aim is that the implementation phase of
the Caribbean Action Plan should be financially self-supporting...", and furthermore, that
"the United Nations system will initially provide financial support, which will progressively
decrease as the Governments of the region, through a Trust Fund or other mechanism,
assume fuller financial responsibility" (UNEP Regional Seas Reports and Studies No. 26,
1983).
64. The First Intergovernmental Meeting, upon adopting the Caribbean Action Plan, established
a Trust Fund for the biennium 1982-1983 for the amount of US$ 1,500,000 to be financed
by voluntary contributions promised by Governments according to an agreed assessment
formula. The meeting noted an estimated budget distribution for the 1981-1983 period as
follows:
1981 1982 1983 TOTAL
FROM THE TRUST FUND
650,000
850,000
1,500,000
FROM
UNEP
800,000 300,000 280,000 1,380,000
FROM OTHER SOURCES
300,000
1,950,000
3,070,000
5,320,000
TOTAL
1,100,000 2,900,000 4,200,000 8,200,000
65. Terms of reference for the management of the Caribbean Trust Fund were approved at the
First Meeting of the Monitoring Committee. These established, among other things, that
"no appropriations from the Trust Fund shall be made... before a minimum of US$ 250,000
has been contributed to the Trust Fund." (UNEP/IG.30/6, Annex II).
- 13 -
66. This minimum was not achieved until September 1983, at which time the CTF became
operational.
67. The level of US$ 1,500,000 for the Caribbean Trust Fund agreed upon in Montego Bay in
1981 has not yet been realized due to a number of factors. Firstly, the Programme has not
attracted the participation of all countries within the region. Secondly, the payment of
contributions to the Fund decreased significantly during the second and third biennia due
primarily to the lack of political co-ordination resulting from the non-establishment of the
RCU. And, finally, one country, has drastically reduced their contribution. It is hoped that
with the operation of the RCU, this situation should be remedied. Table / 2 and Figure 2
illustrate the status of pledges and received payments to the Caribbean Trust Fund as of 31
December 1987.
TABLE 2: STATUS OF PLEDGES AND RECEIVED CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE
CARIBBEAN TRUST FUND IN US$
(AS OF 31 DECEMBER 1987)
STATE OR
1982-1983 1984-1985 1986-1987
TOTAL
TERRITORY
Pledged Received Pledged Received Pledged Received Pledged Received
ANGUILLA
- - - - - - -
ANTIGUA AND
- - - 16450
- 16450
-
BARBUDA
ARUBA
- - - - - - -
BAHAMAS
16450 16450 16450 16450 16450 16450 49350 49350
BARBADOS
16450 16450 16450 16450 16450 16450 49350 49350
BELIZE
15000 15000 15000 15000 15000 6500 45000 36500
BR. VIRGIN ISLANDS 11000 11000 11000 11000 11000 5500 33000 27500
CAYMAN ISLANDS
- - - - - - - -
COLOMBIA
30940 30940 30940 30940 30940 30940 92820 92820
COSTA RICA
17898
17898
17898
53694
CUBA 30940
30940 30940 30940 30940 18384 92820 80264
DOMINICA -
- - - - - - -
DOMINICAN
19347
- 19347
- 19347
58041
REPUBLIC
EEC
- - - - - - - -
FRANCE
375000 375000 375000 375000 375000 375000 1125000 1125000
GRENADA
16450 6001 16450 -
16450 -
49350 6001
GUATEMALA
17898
17898 -
17898 -
53694 -
GUYANA
16450
- 16450
- 16450
- 49350
-
HAITI
16450 16450 16450
16450
49350 16450
HONDURAS
16450 16450 16450
16450 -
49350 16450
JAMAICA
25000 25000 25000 -
25000 -
75000 25000
MEXICO
250000 250000
20000
20000
60000
20000
330000
290000
MONTSERRAT
5000
- 5000
- 5000
- 15000
NETHERLANDS
30000 15000 30000 -
30000 -
90000 15000
ANTILLES
- 14 -
STATE OR
1982-1983 1984-1985 1986-1987
TOTAL
TERRITORY
Pledged Received Pledged Received Pledged Received Pledged Received
NICARAGUA
16450
- 16450
- 16450
- 49350
-
PANAMA
17898 17898 17898 17898 17898 15530 53694 51326
ST. KITTS-NEVIS
5000 5000 5000 5000 5000 1180 15000 11180
ST. LUCIA
15000 15000 15000 15000 15000 15000 45000 45000
ST.
15000 15000 15000 15000 3250 45000 33250
VINCENT/GRENADI
NES 15000
SURINAME
16450 16450 16450 8228 16450 -
49350 24678
TRINIDAD
AND 19347 19347 19347 19347 19347 12333 58041 51027
TOBAGO
TURKS
AND 6732 6732 -
-
9000 27000 6732
CAICOS
UNITED STATES
- - - - - -
VENEZUELA
230000 230000 230000 230000 230000 230000 690000 690000
TOTAL
1268600 1150108 1031868 826253 1097318 766527 3409054 2742878
Footnote: At the time of finalizing this document, contributions for the 1988-89 period as well as for previous
biennia had been received from Barbados, Colombia, France, St. Lucia, Turks and Caicos Islands and
Venezuela.
FIG. 2. PLEDGES AND PAYMENTS TO CARIBBEAN TRUST FUND 1982-1987
(As of 31 December 1987)
68. The marked reduction in CTF's resources is a matter of serious concern. While
contributions and pledges have been sharply decreasing, the financial requirements of the
Action Plan are escalating at an accelerated pace due to the establishment of the RCU; the
entry into force of the legal agreements; and the launching of new projects.
69. Table 3 shows the commitments (through signed projects) and expenditures made from all
sources to support the development and implementation of the Caribbean Action Plan in the
1975-1987 period (as of 31 December 1987). Figure 3 illustrates how these resources have
been distributed between the development phase, co-ordination support and project
implementation. The counterpart contributions presented include UNDP, UNESCO, and
the Government of Cuba's support 6 for project FP/CR/8201-79-01 (control and
management of pollution in Havana Bay), although not all of it was a contribution to the
regional objectives of the Action Plan.
FIG. 3. DISTRIBUTION OF SUPPORT FROM ALL SOURCES TO DIFFERENT
ELEMENTS OF THE ACTION PLAN 1976-1987
- 15 -
TABLE 3. COMMITMENTS AND EXPENDITURES FROM DIFFERENT SOURCES
TO SUPPORT THE DEVELOPMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ACTION
PLAN FOR THE CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME (1975-1989)
(AS OF 6 NOVEMBER 1989)
Project Number
Implementatio
Subject
Duration
EF
CTF
CP
Total Cost
n
A. Projects related to the development of CEP
FP/0503-76-02 UNWP Preparatory (1976-1977) 45,548
- -
45,548
FP/1000-77-01 ECLAC Development
(1977-1981) 1,135,262 -
150,000 1,285,262
FP/0501-73-05 IOC/FAO Marine
Pollution (1975-1976)
4,712
-
6,900
11,612
FP/0503-76-07 IOC/FAO Marine
Pollution (1976-1977)
28,720
-
21,500
50,220
FP/0503-77-07 IOC
Directories (1979)
2,518
- 10,500
13,018
FP/0501-78-02 IMCO Marine
Pollution (1978-1979)
30,379
-
11,580
41,959
FP/0503-80-08 OAS
Oil
Pollution (1980) 26,035
-
75,000
101,035
Control
Sub-total
1,273,174
275,480
1,548,654
B. Projects directly related to implementation of the Action Plan
1. Co-ordination
FP/1200-75-01 WMO
Natural
(1976-1980) 78,361
-
43,000 121,361
Disasters
FP/5102-77-03 UNEP
General (1977-1984) 906,000 -
-
906,000
Support
FP/1105-81-01 SIERRA
C
Coastal
(1982-1983) 117,000 -
141,000 258,000
Management
FP/CR/5102-82-02 UNEP
General
(1982-1986) 884,530 99,259
138,452 1,123,241
Support
FP/5103-85-03 IUCN
Species
(1985-1987) 30,010
-
63,000 93,010
Management
FP/5102-85-05 UNEP
General (1985) 142,000
-
-
142,000
Support
FP/5102-86-02 UNEP
General (1986-1989) 13,523
-
-
13,523
Support
FP/CR/JA/CP/5102-
UNEP General (1986-1987) 507,432 845,000
630,513 1,982,945
86-05
Support
Sub-total
2,678,856
944,25
1,015,965
4,640,080
9
- 16 -
2. Projects
FP/CR/8201-79-01 UNESCO
Coastal
(1981-1986)
513,086
40,171
5,413,501
5,966,758
Management
FP/CR/5102-80-07
CARICOM
Marine
(1981-1987) 457,766 360,270
585,841 1,403,877
Pollution
FP/CR/5102-82-12 CCA
Environmental (1983-1984) 38,000 50,000 29,000 117,000
Education
FP/5102-82-13 IMO
Oil
pollution
(1982) 44,698
- 17,000
61,698
Control
CR/5102-84-03 IMO
Oil
Pollution
(1984-1985) -
69,697 41,000 110,697
Control
CR/5102-84-05 ECLAC Tourism (1984-1985) -
47,892 34,800 82,692
FP/5102-84-06 FAO
Directories (1985-1986) 49,700 -
21,080 70,780
CR/5102-84-07 UNEP-
Training (1984-1987) -
46,322
-
46,322
ROLAC
CR/5102-84-08 IOC
Marine
(1985-1986) -
115,958
169,500 285,458
Pollution
CR/5102-85-01 MEXICO Environmental
(1987) - 88,000
63,611
151,611
Impact
FP/5102-85-04 IUCN
Environmental
(1985-1989) 6,000
-
2,000
8,000
Management
CR/5102-86-03 FRANCE Industrial (1986) - 25,418
43,100
68,518
Wastes
FP/5102-86-04 WIDECAST
Conservation (1986-1987)
-
27,000 318,000
345,000
FP/CR/5102-87-02 CCA
Environmental (1987-1988) 40,504 76,000 14,000 130,504
Education
CR/5102-87-04 UNESCO Conservation
(1987-1988) -
64,900 33,000 97,900
CR/5102-87-06 IMO
Oil
Pollution
(1987-1988) -
104,500
64,000 168,500
Control
CR/5102-87-07 UNESCO Coastal
(1987-1988) -
90,000 251,000 341,000
Management
CR/5102-87-08 VENEZUELA
Marine
(1987-1989) -
190,000
385,000 575,000
Pollution
Sub-total
1,149,754 1,396,128
7,485,433 10,031,315
Total 5,101,784 2,340,387
8,776,878 16,220,049
- 17 -
70. Appropriations of the resources of the CTF by the Monitoring and Intergovernmental
Meetings have been on the rise in the 1983-1987 period. Table 4 and Figure 4 illustrate
CTF appropriations. The expansion of the programme of activities, coupled with
diminishing income and increasing inflation, should by now have curtailed the
implementation of the Action Plan. Two factors prevented this: the lull in programme
implementation during the 1985-1986 period, coupled with the simultaneous accumulation
of overdue payments; and UNEP's continuation of its support at higher levels than those
prescribed by its catalytic role.
TABLE 4. APPROPRIATIONS OF CTF RESOURCES BY INTERGOVERNMENTAL
AND MONITORING COMMITTEE MEETINGS
MEETINGS APPROPRIATIONS
IMMEDIATE
PENDING
CO-
PROGRAMM
TOTAL
PROJECTS
PROJECTS
ORDINATIO
E SUPPORT
(a)
(b)
N
(c)
III MONITORING COMMITTEE
636,000 425,000 60,000 -
1,121,000
(Havana, 8-11 November 1983)
III INTERGOVERNMENTAL
627,000 803,200 50,000 98,800 1,579,000
(Cancún, 24-26 April 1985)
V MONITORING COMMITTEE
- - 60,000
- 60,000
(Kingston, 11-13 May 1987)
IV INTERGOVERNMENTAL (d)
- 1,548,300
555,000
- 2,103,300
(Guadeloupe, 26-28 October 1987)
TOTAL
1,263,000 2,776,500 725,000 98,800
4,863,300
(a) Appropriations to projects for immediate implementation against funds available at the time of the meetings.
(b) Appropriations for projects left on a pending status (in priority order) until funds become available, includes
planned co-ordination support.
(c) Overhead costs charged by UNEP (13% of expenditure), not identified in appropriations by other meetings.
(d) At this meeting no priority order was fixed for project implementation, projects were to be implemented "as
soon as they are appropriately prepared".
FIG. 4. APPROPRIATIONS FOR PROGRAMME IMPLEMENTATION FROM
CARIBBEAN TRUST FUND 1983-1987
Footnote: Appropriations of the CTF's resources by the Monitoring and Intergovernmental
Meetings have steadily increased during the 1983-1987 period.
71. The Government of France, the single major contributor to the Caribbean Trust Fund, has
already indicated to UNEP that their regularly paid contributions, at amounts agreed in the
Intergovernmental Meetings, are proportionately too high, in view of the fact that
contributions from many other governments are not being received in the agreed amounts.
72. The French Government had originally stated in Montego Bay, at the time when the first
pledges were made to the CTF, that they would only pledge 25% of the total of the Fund set
at US$ 1,500,000, and in fact they have contributed 40% of the total sum received by the
Fund in the 1982-87 period.(*)
- 18 -
73. As stated in the Action Plan, financial support to the Programme from the Environment
Fund of UNEP is to decrease gradually, in line with the catalytic role of the organization,
and the Action Plan has to become financially self-supporting. Actually, UNEP haA s
already gone beyond its originals plans in supporting the Action Plan, and its expected
future contribution, subject to the availability of funds, would not exceed the amount of
US$ 700,000 for 1988-1989 and will certainly taper off as the CTF assumes greater
responsibility for the common costs associated with the Plan.
74. Financial support was also envisaged in the Action Plan, from other sources that could
contribute to the implementation of activities on a project by project basis. These sources
have come short of the Montego Bay estimates. They have chiefly provided in kind support
to develop the activities of the Action Plan. Although this genre of assistance has proved
most valuable in facilitating the implementation of the programme, it in itself is an outcome
of cash inflows, a multiplier of the allocated CTF and UNEP funds.
75. The economic crisis affecting the Caribbean nations cannot be overstated. It could be
argued as the main reason behind the lack of support to the Caribbean Trust FunB d. On the
other hand, the levels of the quotas assigned to each country are extremely modest, even
when taking into account the economic crisis. Perhaps a more plausible explanation could
be that, prior to the establishment of the RCU, several countries were thoroughly convinced
that the Action Plan was truly a viable vehicle for regional co-operation on environmental
and natural resource management; and as to what are the concrete benefits that could be
derived from it.
76. Support to the Action Plan from other sources, including those countries participating in the
programme, but not contributing to the Trust Fund could be procured, if those Governments
which are actively participating, visibly demonstrate their political support for it, at the
various international fora and in their bilateral negotiations.
TRAINING AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
77. The Caribbean Action Plan gives the highest priority to strengthening the institutional and
human resources of the countries of the region, in the various fieC lds of environmental
management. For this reason the training and technical assistance component is present in
most of the projects designed to implement the Action Plan. A list of individuals that have
participated in training exercises stemming from the Action Plan is provided in Annex IV.
Several international agencies and regional organizations have actively collaborated in the
training activities: ECLAC, IOC, IMO, FAO, WHO/PAHO, CARICOM, CCA and OAS.
(*) At the time of finalizing this document and given the contributions received in payment of
arrears from several countries, the percentage of the French contribution to the CTF has
significantly diminished.
78. It is difficult to assess how adequate the training provided has been in achieving the
objective of developing human resources and institutions, as specific feedback from the
- 19 -
participants is not available. Nonetheless, the general perception is that individual and
group training, conducted in the areas of marine pollution monitoring and oil spill
contingency planning, have been quite effective in improving the capabilities of the
participating national institutions in these fields.
79. The provision of technical assistance (experts and equipment) has been limited to two
specific cases: the build up of the CARICOM's Caribbean Environmental Health Institute in
St. Lucia (CEP-7); and inputs to the Cuban Institute of Transportation Research for the
development of a marine pollution and coastal zone management project for Havana Bay
(CEP-6). A substantial amount of the assistance for the latter was made possible through
the use of non-convertible currencies available to UNEP's Environment Fund.
SUMMARY
80. Widespread consultations with the States and territories of the region and with international
and regional bodies, at both governmental and non-governmental levels, to identify
environmental priorities and design appropriate management strategies, were crucial in
developing a politically and technically viable Action Plan that was a suitable instrument
for regional co-operation.
81. The adoption of the Caribbean Action Plan created an effective dialogue for co-operation in
addressing common environmental concerns. The signing and ratification of regional legal
agreements, in spite of prevailing conflicts, and the launching of regional co-operative
actions for the control and prevention of shared problems like marine pollution and
accidental oil spills, confirms the usefulness of this dialogue.
82. The Action Plan has yet to attain its full potential with regard to regional co-operation. The
temporary loss of focus on long-term goals should now be replaced by a long-term
comprehensive strategy capable of yielding additional, more effective and efficient benefits
and results to the participating countries. The work of the RCU, based in Kingston, should
now attract the interest and support of all governments within the region, including that of
funding agencies, acting in partnership in the attainment of sustainable development within
the region.
83. The lack of interest has been reflected in: diminishing participation in the Action Plan's
intergovernmental meetings; a drastic reduction in the payments to the Caribbean Trust
Fund; and important cutbacks in pledges by some countries.
84. Several countries of the region have never become fully incorporated in the Action Plan,
others seem to have abandoned their initial interest altogether, and some, although
participating in the programme, have never committed themselves to finance its common
costs. The non-committal posture of the United States, to G contribute financially to the
programme or to actively promote and support it, stands out as a singular example. On the
other hand, the Action Plan has never been seriously promoted by other Governments, even
those participating actively in it, among the international and bilateral sources which are
undertaking similar programmes in the region. Moreover, Governments have allocated
- 20 -
some of the scarce funds of the CTF to support projects that can hardly be defined as having
a regional significance.
85. It is of interest to note that, at the time when there was a growing lack of interest in the
programme, and an ebb of income flows to support it, the Caribbean Action Plan arrived at
a new promissory phase; the opening of the Regional Co-ordinating Unit in Kingston, and
the entry into force of the Cartagena agreements. These recent developments augment the
possibilities of attaining the objectives of the Action Plan. The new thrust brought by the
establishment of the RCU is already yielding new implementation initiatives, which if
successful, could bring forth a new direction to the programme. These initiatives include
the design of new projects having a regional character and executed in a co-ordinated
fashion, a more active pursuit of linkages with other regional programmes and of
communications with participating Governments.
86. In conclusion, a revitalization of the implementation of the Caribbean Action Plan is
essential, basically through new well-conceived regional activities, which clearly
demonstrate the concrete benefits to be accrued from regional co-operative actions.
Additionally, the full participation in the Action Plan by Governments that have not
previously done so, must be actively sought.
87. At the last Intergovernmental Meeting (Guadeloupe, 26-28 October 1987), governments
realized that the implementation of the Caribbean Action Plan needed a reorientation, and
initial steps were taken in this direction, including the request for this evaluation.
88. It is too early yet to assess the end result of the initiatives coming out of the recently
established RCU and the reorientation requested at the Intergovernmental Meeting held in
Guadeloupe, although one is certain that they will lead to a revitalization of the Action Plan;
otherwise, the significant investments already made, in terms of funds (nearly US$
15,000,000), human commitment and care would have been in vain.
- 21 -
ANNEX I
ANALYSIS OF ACTIVITIES CARRIED OUT IN THE
FRAMEWORK OF THE ACTION PLAN
This Annex contains: (a) the list of all projects undertaken specifically in the framework
of the Caribbean Action Plan or directly supporting it; and (b) the analysis of the results obtained
by individual projects.
A. LIST OF PROJECTS
Projects are arranged in chronological order, i.e. as they have been approved by the
Environment Fund of UNEP. Project numbers of completed projects are underlined. The
organizations responsible for their implementation are identified in the project titles. Activity
codes do not correspond to previous denominations used in other CEP documents.
PROJECT NUMBER
PROJECT TITLE
ACTIVITY
CODE
FP/0503-76-02
Caribbean Environment Programme Activity - Preparatory Activity (P.A.1) (UNEP) CEP-1
FP/0503-76-07
Joint IOC/FAO/UNEP International Workshop on Marine Pollution in the CEP-2
Caribbean and Adjacent Areas (formerly FP/0501-73-05 Caribbean Regional
Pollution Workshop)
FP/1000-77-01
Development of an Action Programme for Sound Environmental Management in the CEP-3
Wider Caribbean Area (UNEP)
FP/5102-77-03
Programme Activity Centre for Regional Seas
CEP-GEN
FP/0503-77-07
Preparation of the "Directory of Marine and Fisheries Research Centres of the CEP-4
Caribbean and Adjacent Regions" (UNEP)
FP/0501-78-02
IMCO/UNEP International Workshop on the Prevention, Abatement and CEP-5
Combatting of Pollution from Ships in the Caribbean (Cartegena, Colombia)
FP/CR/8201-79-01
Investigation and Control of Marine Pollution in Cuba
CEP-6
(UNESCO/UNDP/Government of Cuba)
FP/CR/5102-80-07
Protection of the Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean Islands CEP-7
(CARICOM)
FP/0503-80-08
Formulation of a Caribbean Oil Spill Control Plan (IMO)
CEP-8
FP/CR/5102-82-02
UNEP Support to the Implementation of the Caribbean Action Plan
CEP-GEN
FP/CR/5102-82-12
Development of Environmental Education and Public Awareness in the Wider CEP-9
Caribbean Region (CCA)
FP/5102-82-13
IMO/UNEP Workshop on Oil Spills and Shoreline Clean-up in the Islands of the CEP-10
Wider Caribbean Region
CR/5102-84-03
Development of Sub-Regional Contingency Plans for the Islands of the Wider CEP-11
Caribbean (IMO)
CR/5102-84-05
Tourism and Environment in the Wider Caribbean region (ECLAC)
CEP-12
FP/5102-84-06
Directories of Marine Institutes and Bibliographies of Marine Pollution (UNEP)
CEP-13
CR/5102-84-07
Environmental Training Project for the Wider Caribbean Region (UNEP - CEP-14
UCORED)
CR/5102-84-08
IOC/UNEP Project in Support of the CARIPOL Regional Programme for Research CEP-15
and Monitoring of Petroleum Pollution in the Marine Environment
CR/5102-85-01
Development of Specific Methodologies for the Preparation of Environmental CEP-16
Impact Assessment in the Wider Caribbean (Ministry of Environment - SEDUE -
- 22 -
Mexico)
FP/5102-85-04
IUCN's Assistance to Inter-regional Activities on Coral Reef Management
CEP-17
FP/5102-85-05 Programme
Activity Centre for Oceans and Coastal Areas (OCA/PAC)
CEP-GEN
FP/5102-86-02 Programme Activity Centre for Oceans and Coastal Areas
CEP-GEN
CR/5102-86-03
Demonstration Workshop for the Treatment of Rum Distillery Wastes by CEP-18
Methanization (Ministry of Environment of France)
FP/5102-86-04
Promotion of the Survival and Recovery of Endangered, Threatened and Vulnerable CEP-19
Sea Turtles in the Caribbean Region (WIDECAST/Monitor International)
FP/CR/JA/CP/5102-86-05 Support for the Regional Co-ordinating Unit for the Action Plan of the Caribbean CEP-GEN
Environment Programme (UNEP)
FP/CR/5102-87-02
Development of Environmental Education and Public Awareness on Marine and CEP-20
Coastal Resources Management in the Wider Caribbean Region (CCA)
CR/5102-87-04
Feasibility of Establishing Biosphere Reserves in the Lesser Antilles Notably as CEP-21
Demonstration Areas for Regional Co-operation in Developing Sound
Environmental Management Practices (UNESCO/MAB)
CR/5102-87-06
Sub-Regional Oil Spill Contingency Planning in the Wider Caribbean (Phase II) CEP-22
(IMO)
CR/5102-87-07
Environmental Management of Bays and Coastal Zones in the Wider Caribbean CEP-23
(UNESCO/Government of Cuba)
CR/5102-87-08
Assessment of Contamination by Hydrocarbons and other Pollutants in the South- CEP-24
eastern Waters of the Caribbean Sea (Ministry of Environment - MARNR -
Venezuela)
B. ANALYSIS OF INDIVIDUAL PROJECTS
The results of each project have been primarily analyzed from the standpoint of their
contribution to the formulation and adoption of the Action Plan, as well as to the subsequent
implementation of its objectives. Activities CEP-1 to CEP 4 were preparatory activities that led
to the development of the Action Plan. CEP-6 to CEP-8 activities were initiated before the
adoption of the Action Plan but contributed towards its implementation, CEP-6 and CEP-7
continued after the adoption of the Action Plan and received support from the Caribbean Trust
Fund.
CEP-GENERAL (SUPPORT AND DEVELOPMENT)
UNEP SECRETARIAL SUPPORT TO THE DEVELOPMENT AND
IMPLEMENTATION OF THE ACTION PLAN FOR THE CARIBBEAN
ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME CEP-1, CEP-3 AND CEP-GEN.
The general support of UNEP for the development and implementation of the Caribbean Action
Plan has been provided through six internal and one external projects: FP/0503-76-02; FP/1000-
77-01 (ECLAC); FP/5102-77-03; FP/CR/5102-82-02; FP/5102-85-05; FP/5102-86-02 and
FP/CR/JA/CP/5102-86-05. In addition, support for an estimated amount of US$ 906,000 was
provided through FP/5102-77-03. These projects covered:
(a) support for a Project Co-ordinator undertaking a preparatory activity out of S UNEP's
Regional Office for Latin America and the Caribbean (April 1976-April 1977);
- 23 -
(b) cost of UNEP/ECLAC staff and consultants involved in the development of the Caribbean
Action Plan until the time of its adoption (August 1977-April 1981);
(c) support for staff in charge of providing interim co-ordination for the implementation of the
Action Plan, until the establishment of the RCU in Jamaica (from April 1981 until September
1986);
(d) support for sixteen technical and Intergovernmental Meetings convened by UNEP. Seven of
these meetings were related to the development and adoption of the Action Plan and the
Convention. The others have been part of the follow-up implementation (see Annex III for
list of meetings); and
(e) support for the Regional Co-ordinating Unit for the Action Plan.
The total cost of the above projects, to the Environment Fund of UNEP, from 1976 to
December 1987 amounts to US$ 4,737,113.
Development Phase
The development of the Caribbean Action Plan in its early stages consisted primarily of
an extensive consultation process, at both technical and political levels, to define its scope and
make it a relevant instrument to help solve the region's environmental needs. The Action Plan
exercise was initially undertaken by UNEP at the request of some Governments of the region.
However, this request was not known to the majority of the countries of the region. The
principal objectives of the preparatory activity and the UNEP/ECLAC project were: to explore
and enlist the political will of the Governments of the region; to underwrite a framework for
regional co-operation on environmental matters; to assess the principal common environmental
concerns of the region; and to formulate a comprehensive programme of action to attend to these
concerns on a short and long term basis. The striking diversity of the region, in cultural, socio-
economic and natural endowments aspects, was a formidable obstacle that had to be overcome in
order to arrive at a programme supported by a broad consensus. On the other hand, the
identification of common environmental concerns was difficult in view of several factors: the
paucity of environmental data; the relative low priority assigned to the environment by a large
number of Governments; and the lack of agreement among natural and social scientists, as well
as policy makers, concerning the substance of the regional programme to be developed, and the
mechanisms to implement it. Some argued in favour of a comprehensive plan of action covering
the broad spectrum of environment and development, emphasizing that the major priority of the
region was to attain social and economic development on a sustainable basis. Another sector
favoured precise and concrete programmes, oriented to the solution of immediate concerns like
oil spills, coastal pollution and conservation. Furthermore, there was broad disagreement among
key countries as to the need for regional legal agreements and the Trust Fund.
Between 1976 and 1980, continuous consultations were undertaken with national,
governmental and non-governmental organizations, as well as with regional and international
bodies. On the basis of individual consultations and the study of recommendations stemming
from various meetings of experts in particular fields of the environmental agenda, preliminary
- 24 -
environmental management priorities were identified by the end of 1977. Between 1978 and
1979, overview studies to assess the environmental problems of the region were undertaken in
the following areas: agriculture, coastal development; natural disasters; human settlements and
tourism; energy production and consumption; environmental health; and marine pollution. These
were developed with the collaboration of FAO, UNDIESA, UNIDO, UNDRO, IMO, OAS and
IUCN. A synthesis of these overviews including elements for an Action Plan was prepared by
the Regional Seas Programme of UNEP. This synthesis was reviewed by a small advisory panel
of high level experts from the region, and a draft Action Plan was formulated.
The draft Action Plan, together with alternative mechanisms for its financial and
institutional support was presented before two meetings of Government-nominated experts,
convened by UNEP, and held respectively in Caracas and Managua, in January 1980 and
February 1981. The first meeting reviewed the draft Action Plan and considered general items
regarding its implementation. The second meeting continued the review in greater detail and
considered alternative financial and institutional arrangements to support the programme. The
meeting agreed on a list of priority activities: the establishment of a regional Trust Fund; and the
establishment of a Regional Co-ordinating Unit, somewhere in the region, to oversee the
implementation of the Action Plan.
The recommendations of the Experts Meeting, were presented to an Intergovernmental
Meeting held in Montego Bay, Jamaica in April 1981, attended by 22 Governments.
The meeting adopted the Action Plan, established a Trust Fund of 1.5 million US dollars
for the 1982-1983 biennium, decided that the Regional Co-ordinating Unit (RCU) be sited in
Kingston, Jamaica, and requested UNEP to develop a flexible regional agreement to be
considered at a later date.
The Action Plan adopted by the Montego Bay Meeting, was a comprehensive programme
covering: marine and coastal pollution; environmental impact; tourism; environmental health;
watershed management; natural disasters; and environmental education. The Plan envisaged the
development of assessment and management activities for each of these programme elements.
Governments identified priorities of common concern which are listed in the Action Plan.
The development phase of the Caribbean Action Plan lasted five years, from April 1976
to April 1981, and represented a cost of approximately US$ 2,000,000 to the Fund of UNEP and
US$ 400,000 from other sources. Of the amount spent by UNEP, an estimated US$ 450,000 was
used to cover costs of meetings, US$ 200,000 for costs associated with the preparation of the
overviews and the remnant (US$ 1,350,000) for staff and general co-ordination activities.
Seemingly, the time and cost involved in the development of the Action Plan were excessive.
However, one must take into account the complexity of the region, the dearth of information
available, and the lack of consensus among the countries of the region about the nature of the
programme and the supporting measures required.
In addition, the institutional arrangements for the main project supporting this
development phase (FP/1000-77-01) were not conducive to efficient implementation; a
cumbersome and long-distance administrative and substantive supervisory procedure, (split
- 25 -
between Nairobi and Santiago) was applied to run the Port of Spain-based project.
Compounding this, the site of the project itself did not make available suitable communications
facilities and other necessary infrastructural requirements to enable the efficient operation of the
project.
The adoption of the Caribbean Action Plan as a framework for regional co-operation on
environmental matters, over a broad political and technical consensus, in a fragmented and
strikingly diverse region, is indeed a noteworthy accomplishment. The consultations which led
to the adoption of the Action Plan, mobilized an unprecedented number of Government officials,
non-governmental organizations and international and regional agencies to assess, for the first
time in a concerted manner, the common environmental priorities of the region and their
relationship with developmental concerns, and to identify regional co-operative management
strategies.
The potential of the Action Plan to serve as a vehicle for regional integration, has yet to
manifest fully, although already the adoption of regional legal agreements for the protection of
the marine commons, and the development of co-operative activities to monitor and control
marine and oil pollution can be considered important strides towards this end.
Implementation
UNEP has contributed (US$ 1,808,390) as general support for the implementation of the
Caribbean Action Plan since its adoption in 1981. This figure does not include support for
specific activities of the Action Plan which are described in the continuing sections of this
Annex.
Through the projects referred to above, UNEP has provided staff support for co-
ordination activities, and covered the costs of Experts and Intergovernmental Meetings (travel,
participation and conference service costs in the former, and conference service costs for the
latter). Three legal Experts Meetings, six Meetings of the Monitoring Committee and four
Intergovernmental Meetings (including the Conference of Plenipotentiaries that adopted the legal
agreements) have been thus far sponsored (see Annex III for list of meetings).
The Intergovernmental Meetings provide the overall authority for the Action Plan. They
are set to take place every two years and constitute the highest expression of the political and
technical dialogue on environmental matters -established within the framework of the Action
Plan. As such, they are in themselves an accomplishment, besides being an effective mechanism
for determining priorities in the programme and deciding on the necessary supporting measures
for its implementation.
The Monitoring Committee was established by Governments to provide technical and
policy guidance to the Secretariat between Intergovernmental Meetings. The meetings of the
Committee have played an essential role in allowing Governments of the region to redefine,
when necessary, the contents of the Plan and to oversee its implementation.
- 26 -
On the other hand, the Monitoring Committee has been assigned the task of providing
policy guidance to the Secretariat and reviewing progress made in the implementation of specific
activities and project proposals for future implementation. However, at times, the Committee
has been assigned the task of reviewing and approving highly technical proposals and reports.
The short term assigned for this task and the technical nature of it goes beyond the capabilities of
the Committee, leading occasionally to significant shortcomings in the analysis of results, and
the approval of technically deficient project proposals. The project approval and review process
needs to be redesigned in order to allow inputs to the proposals from national scientific and
technical institutions prior to their consideration by the Monitoring Committee.
The common co-ordination costs of the Action Plan include besides the meetings, staff
and associated administrative costs. Up to now, UNEP's contribution towards these common
costs have been the largest. From 1981 until 1986, UNEP financed direct staff support through a
programme officer and a secretary, indirect support from other professional and administrative
staff of its Regional Seas Programme, and associated administrative support such as travel and
communications. Since June 1986, it has financed the Co-ordinator of the RCU and a secretary.
The support for the RCU staff will continue until end of 1988, at which point it is expected that
the CTF will shoulder all common costs of the Action Plan and UNEP will shift its support to
specific Action Plan projects that coincide with the priorities established by its Governing
Council.
In addition, to bearing the costs of meetings and providing staff support for the co-
ordination, UNEP has sponsored, through the CEP-GEN projects: media seminars, publications
and film documentaries to promote and publicize the Action Plan; drafting committees to prepare
the final texts in French, English and Spanish of the Convention and Protocol; training of
scientific and technical personnel in specific analytical techniques; and technical assistance to
countries of the region affected by oil spills.
A documentary on the Caribbean Environment produced and broadcasted by BBC has
been highly regarded in the region as an educational tool and is perhaps the best documentary on
the environment of the insular Caribbean which is now available. On the other hand, the special
issue of "Ambio" on the Caribbean (Volume X, No. 6, 1981), provided a serious scientific digest
of different region wide environmental issues. Both of these information tools were produced as
part of the general support provided by UNEP to the Caribbean Action Plan.
A media seminar was held in Cartagena, Colombia, in March 1983, in conjunction with
the Second Intergovernmental Meeting and Conference of Plenipotentiaries. More than 25
journalists and media professionals from the region participated in the seminar. Briefing
materials and press kits on environment and development issues in the Caribbean region were
prepared by Earthscan on behalf of UNEP, distributed and explained to the participants. The
seminar spawned numerous articles on environmental issues in newspapers and magazines
throughout the region.
It is not possible to quantify the effect these information activities have had in raising
public awareness on environmental issues. However, in all cases, the information was widely
disseminated and most likely it has helped cast public opinion on these matters.
- 27 -
CEP-GEN has supported training of staff members of the Caribbean Environmental
Health Institute in St. Lucia in the analysis of pesticide residues using gas chromatography and
intercalibration of microbiological monitoring methods for coastal waters. Technical expertise
on microbiological monitoring and general chemical analytical techniques was also provided to
CEHI.
Technical assistance was also provided to the Government of Jamaica in 1981, for the
development of watershed management guidelines, for the assessment of the damage caused by
an offshore oil spill and to the Government of Mexico during 1980 for the assessment of the
ecological impact of the spill from the offshore platform IXTOC-1 in the Gulf of Mexico.
CEP-2
JOINT IOC/FAO/UNEP INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON MARINE POLLUTION
IN THE CARIBBEAN AND ADJACENT AREAS
This Workshop was held in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, in December 1976, with
the participation of thirty-eight international and regional experts. The workshop assessed
marine pollution problems in the Caribbean and adjacent regions.
Technical papers were presented in topics such as regional oceanography, monitoring for
heavy metals, studies of petroleum pollution and river inputs. The workshop identified oil
pollution as the most acute marine pollution problem of the region. On the basis of the
recommendations of the workshop, the CARIPOL Marine Pollution Research and Monitoring
Programme was established as an activity of IOCARIBE (IOC/UNESCO), initially focussing on
the assessment and distribution of petroleum pollution in the region.
Other recommendations of the meeting referred to d proposals for regional actions on
health aspects of marine pollution, coastal processes related to the transfer and mixing of
pollutants, effects of marine pollution on living resources and training education and mutual
assistance. Except for the CARIPOL exercise and the training activities associated with it, the
Workshop's recommendations have not been implemented and many of them are now outdated.
A follow-up workshop is now being planned for 1988.
The total cost of the workshop was US$ 50,220 (28,720 contributed by UNEP and 21,500
by FAO and IOC). The workshop constituted the technical basis for the development of the
marine pollution monitoring programmes of the Caribbean Action Plan. Unfortunately, no
follow-up was provided to the other recommendations of the workshop.
CEP-4
PREPARATION OF THE "DIRECTORY OF MARINE AND FISHERIES RESEARCH
CENTRES OF THE CARIBBEAN AND ADJACENT REGIONS"
- 28 -
The Directory was first issued in 1980 as a joint UNEP/IOC effort and contained
references to more than e 150 institutions describing: facilities, laboratory equipment; scientific
and technical personnel resources; and main fields of research interests. The Directory has been
widely distributed and has definitively contributed to linking marine research institutions in the
region. A second edition was published in 1985 as a Directory of Marine Environmental Centres
in the Caribbean containing updated information on institutions dealing with the marine
environment in the region both at the research and policy levels (see CEP-13).
The total cost for the preparation and publication of the first edition of the Directory was
US$ 13,018 (2,518 from UNEP and 10,500 from IOC).
CEP-5
IMCO/UNEP INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON THE PREVENTION, ABATEMENT
AND COMBATTING OF POLLUTION FROM SHIPS IN THE CARIBBEAN
The IMCO/UNEP International Workshop on the Prevention, Abatement and Combatting
of Pollution from Ships in the Caribbean was held in October 1978 in Cartegena, Colombia.
Thirty-five key personnel from nineteen countries were trained in identifying pollution problems
caused by ships. The training was instrumental in the formulation of national programmes aimed
at: (a) the implementation of requirements of relevant international Conventions for the
prevention of pollution from ships; (b) recommendations on the necessary institutional and
administrative arrangements for contingency planning. The Workshop utilised the services of a
team of instructors from the Environmental Engineering Division of Texas A&M University.
The Workshop costed US$ 41,959 (US$ 30,379 from the Environment Fund and US$
11,580 from IMCO).
CEP-6
INVESTIGATION AND CONTROL OF MARINE POLLUTION IN CUBA
This project was initiated in 1979 as part of the UNDP Country Programme for Cuba. Its
original objective was to develop an action plan to identify the operational programmes
necessary to initiate the decontamination of Havana Bay. Additional objectives were
incorporated into the project through subsequent amendments including:
(a) establishment of scientific and technical infrastructure for research and monitoring pollution
of Havana Bay and adjacent areas;
(b) the promotion of Cuban participation in activities related to the environment at the regional
level;
- 29 -
(c) the integration of the projects' activities within the Caribbean Action Plan framework, using
the project as a case study for the control of marine pollution in the Wider Caribbean; and
(d) to provide training in management and control of pollution in bays and adjacent coastal
waters to regional experts through a regional workshop.
The results of the project as it refers to national objectives were impressive as it
substantially achieved all of its objectives. Some of the outputs of the project at the national
level were:
(a) a detailed manual of methodologies for monitoring pollution in Havana Bay;
(b) a complete inventory and characterization of pollutants discharged to the Bay;
(c) the establishment of a scientific and technical infrastructure (personnel and equipment) to
deal with the environmental management of bays and coastal ecosystems in Cuba;
(d) the creation of a scientific library and a data bank on various aspects of coastal pollution in
Cuba
(e) specific management recommendations to abate the pollution problems of Havana Bay and
decontaminate its waters; and
(f) a Master Plan for the rehabilitation of the Bay divided into short, medium and long term
required actions. Many of the short term actions are already being implemented.
The regional component of the project consisted mainly of three concrete activities: two
regional workshops held in Havana in 1984 and 1985 respectively; and an international training
course on applied marine pollution monitoring methodologies, based on the experiences of the
Havana Bay study. Specialists from Colombia, Mexico, Panama, and Venezuela took advantage
of this training course.
In our opinion, the regional component of the project was not as fully developed as the
national one. The integration of the project into the Caribbean Action Plan framework was not
completely successful, perhaps due to the fact that the project was initiated well before the other
Action Plan activities reached the implementation stage. Nevertheless, the extensive
documentation resulting from the project and the methodologies adapted to study a tropical
embayment are a positive contribution to the analysis of similar environmental problems in the
coastal areas of the region.
The total cost of this project was US $5,966,758 broken down as follows:
Cost to UNEP's Fund
- Convertible currency
224,645
- Roubles*
269,870
- Cuban pesos*
15,049
- 30 -
Cost to Caribbean Trust Fund
40,171
Cost to UNDP
974,168
Cost to Cuban Government
4,442,855
* (in US dollar equivalent)
The Caribbean Trust Fund contribution to the project was used to cover the costs of the
regional workshops and training. UNEP's support went to cover staff costs of the project's
international Chief Technical Advisor, laboratory equipment and short term experts.
CEP-7
PROTECTION OF THE MARINE AND COASTAL ENVIRONMENT OF THE
CARIBBEAN ISLANDS
This on-going project was initiated in January 1981, prior to the adoption of the Action
Plan. Its objective is to strengthen the institutional capabilities of the sub-region formed by the
Eastern Caribbean islands to assess and manage their waste management and coastal pollution
problems. The project has been executed by CARICOM in co-operation with WHO/PAHO
through the Caribbean Environmental Health Institute, a subregional facility, based in St. Lucia,
and established by the CARICOM Health Ministers to provide services to Governments in the
assessment and management of environmental health problems.
The project has been divided in two main components: waste management; and coastal
and marine pollution monitoring. The objectives of the waste management component are to
carry out an inventory, characterize the land-based sources of pollution entering the marine
environment, define their adverse effect on coastal and marine ecosystems and public health and
develop projects aimed at eliminating major pollution sources. Studies have been undertaken in
eleven countries of the CARICOM subregion. These have focussed on the impingement of
domestic and agricultural wastes, industrial processes, and coastal development on coastal
ecosystems. Countries studied were Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize,
Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts-Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines and Trinidad and
Tobago.
The methodology and the results of the studies are synthesized in a report published by
PAHO in 1985 entitled "Land-based Sources of Pollution in Coastal, Marine and Land Areas in
CARICOM States". The report has been distributed to all member States together with the
respective country reports. It is expected that this documentation will assist Governments in
generating project proposals for waste the development of appropriate waste management
actions.
The second component of the project has been more fully developed. It has enabled the
posting at CEHI's facilities in St. Lucia of three marine scientists throughout the period 1982-
1987 and the establishment of a laboratory equipped with modern analytical capabilities for
monitoring marine and coastal pollution problems in the Eastern Caribbean islands. Activen
research and monitoring activities have been undertaken to analyze oil pollution, water quality of
- 31 -
coastal areas, and heavy metal pollution. In addition to the laboratory facilities at the Institute,
the project has provided technical assistance for the equipping of national laboratories in St.
Vincent, Grenada, Dominica, St Kitts-Nevis and St. Lucia to establish a subregional monitoring
network focussing on coastal water quality and oil pollution monitoring. On the establishment of
the network, six weeks of training are provided to technicians in the participating national
laboratories in field and laboratory analytical procedures.
In July 1985, an Environmental Pollution Workshop was convened at CEHI to examine
the findings of the project and identify measures to be taken. Twenty one participants from
seven Eastern Caribbean States plus international and regional observers attended the workshop.
Its recommendations were forwarded to Governments for the appropriate actions.
The project has achieved considerable success in providing the Eastern Caribbean with
the technical capabilities to assess marine and coastal pollution and waste management
problems. The monitoring component of the project has accomplished more concrete results
than the waste management component. This is probably due to the fact that implementing the
recommendations of the country waste management studies requires large capital investments.
The laboratories at the CEHI facilities in St. Lucia represent an unequaled subregional facility
that confirms in clear terms the benefits of regional co-operation. The training component of the
project is also noteworthy. Training has been provided already to more than 30 technicians of
the region, in surroundings and conditions similar to the ones they have in their own countries.
The implementation of the project has been hindered partially by the institutional
uncertainty of CEHI, which has not yet been ratified by the CARICOM Governments, and the
isolated conditions in which the scientific staff was operating during the first years of the
project's life. At present the project has been linked with the other marine pollution related
projects of the Caribbean Action Plan, and IOC is collaborating with UNEP in overseeing the
technical implementation of the project.
The total cost of the project until December 1987 amounted to US$ 1,403,877 broken
down as follows:
UNEP Environment Fund
457,766
Caribbean Trust Fund
360,270
Counterpart (PAHO, CARICOM, Government of St. Lucia)
585,841
CEP-8
FORMULATION OF A CARIBBEAN OIL SPILL CONTROL PLAN
This project was implemented by the Organization of American States and was initiated
prior to the adoption of the Action Plan. Its main objective was helping the Governments of the
Caribbean region in formulating a plan for mutual co-operation in the detection, monitoring,
control and clean-up of oil spills. The project provided a direct input to the development of the
Caribbean Action Plan elements dealing with the issue of oil pollution. Originally this activity
- 32 -
came up as an initiative of the OAS, later receiving funding from USAID and from the
Environment Fund of UNEP.
Two regional meetings were organized as part of the project implementation: a Meeting
of the Smaller Caribbean Islands on Oil Spill Contingency Planning (San Juan, Puerto Rico, 16-
20 June 1980) and a Meeting of Caribbean Islands on Oil Spill Contingency Planning (Barbados,
2r 4-28 November 1980). Fifteen island countries participated in the first meeting, as well as
representatives from international and regional organizations and industry. Twenty one countries
from the Caribbean Basin participated in the Barbados Meeting plus representatives from
industry and regional and international agencies. The meetings as well as the consultations with
Governments and industry, undertaken as part of the project helped to identify immediate and
future needs in combating oil spills in the region. The Protocol on Co-operation in Combating
Oil Spills in the region which was adopted in Cartagena together with the Convention, and the
national, subregional and regional oil spill contingency plans that have been formulated in the
Caribbean may be considered as sequels to this project.
The total project cost amounted to US $101,035, 26,035 from the Fund of UNEP and
75,000 from OAS and USAID.
CEP-9
DEVELOPMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION AND PUBLIC AWARENESS
IN THE WIDER CARIBBEAN REGION
This project was implemented by the Caribbean Conservation Association. Its main
objective was to develop and strengthen institutional capabilities in the Caribbean to carry out
environmental education and public awareness programmes and to establish an information bank
of educational materials relevant to the Caribbean region which could be adapted, reproduced
and distributed at a relatively low cost. The principal outputs of the project were:
(a) a directory of Environmental Education institutions in the Wider Caribbean;
(b) an illustrated educational booklet on "Corals and Coral Reefs in the Caribbean";
(c) a series of twelve half-hour audio cassettes on various environmental subjects, which were
broadcasted on most of the English-speaking Caribbean radio stations;
(d) a workshop for Caribbean media personnel;
(e) video tapes on watershed management and coral reefs;
(f) continuous promotion of the Caribbean Action Plan activities through newsletters, lectures
and conferences to non-governmental organizations;
- 33 -
(g) production of various television public service announcements on slash and burn agriculture,
solid waste disposal, watersheds and water pollution;
(h) production of radio public service announcements on spiny lobster, tar balls, mangroves and
coral reefs; and
(i) preparation of short articles for the print media such as the "The Siege of the Coast", "The
Health of the Reef" and "The Caribbean Action Plan".
All information materials were widely distributed throughout the region. The project met,
and to some extent exceeded its short-term objectives and was instrumental in promoting an
active participation of the English speaking countries in the Action Plan, particularly of the
Eastern Caribbean islands. This project was an excellent example of an efficiently organized and
implemented programme. The relatively small input of funds from UNEP and the Caribbean
Trust Fund generated many concrete and high quality outputs and substantial goodwill to the
Caribbean Action Plan, particularly in the smaller Caribbean islands.
The total cost of the project in US dollars was 117,000 broken down as follows:
UNEP Environment Fund
38,000
Caribbean Trust Fund
50,000
Caribbean Conservation Association
29,000
CEP-10
IMO/UNEP WORKSHOP ON OIL SPILLS AND SHORELINE CLEAN-UP IN THE
ISLANDS OF THE WIDER CARIBBEAN REGION
The immediate objective of this project was to develop a detailed course manual in
English and Spanish, on methods and means for oil spill clean-up containing the following
elements:
(a) assessment of major oil spill risk areas in the Caribbean;
(b) characteristics of shoreline types in the area;
(c) fate and impact of stranded oil on sandy beaches;
(d) shoreline protection, clean-up and restoration;
(e) state of the art in beach cleaning methodology and equipment;
(f) case study; and
(g) contingency planning.
- 34 -
A five day workshop was held in Barbados in February 1983 to tew st the manual and
provide field training related to restoration and clean-up techniques in actual coastal sites.
The long term objective was to increase the capability of island authorities to clean and
restore recreational beaches affected by chronic or massive accidental oil pollution, by using the
most appropriate methods.
The project was implemented by IMO in collaboration with OAS. The high quality
manual resulting from this project has been a useful resource for personnel involved in shoreline
management. It has been widely distributed by UNEP, IMO and OAS throughout the region and
has proven useful even to countries outside of the Caribbean.
The short term objective of the project was definitively met. The present project can be
seen as a direct consequence of CEP-8, and it may be considered a pace setter concerning oil
spill response activities in the region. Subsequent to the termination of this project, UNEP and
IMO have undertaken a number of related activities in the region within the context of the Action
Plan. An oil spill contingency plan is now in place for the islands of the Caribbean and a similar
arrangement is being negotiated for the northern tier countries of South America and Central
America. In a way, the project has also met its long term objective, although the only way to test
how successful these efforts have been, is to see how effective the measures taken by the
countries of the region to combat an actual spill are, which fortunately has not occurred since the
adoption of the contingency plans.
The total cost of the y project was US$ 61,698; 44,698 from UNEP and 17,000 from
IMO and OAS.
CEP-11
DEVELOPMENT OF SUB-REGIONAL CONTINGENCY PLANS FOR THE ISLANDS
OF THE WIDER CARIBBEAN
The objectives of this project were to assist the islands of the Wider Caribbean in
developing bilateral or multilateral subregional operational arrangements to facilitate the
implementation of the Protocol Concerning Co-operation in Combating Oil Spills in the Wider
Caribbean Region and to survey the extent of oil pollution in the South American subregion of
CEP as a first phase to exploring the feasibility of subregional contingency plans.
The outputs of the project included a subregional oil spill contingency plan for the island
States and territories of the Caribbean, which was adopted at a Government experts meeting held
in St. Lucia from 7-11 May 1984. Seventeen countries participated in the meeting. Another
output of the project was a comprehensive report entitled "IMO/UNEP Survey of the Status of
Oil Pollution Control in the South American Subregion of the Wider Caribbean Region"
including detailed annexes for each State and territory covered by the survey (Colombia, French
Guiana, Guyana, Netherlands Antilles, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela).
- 35 -
The oil spill contingency plan for the island countries has provided the basis for the
development of national contingency plans for preventing and combating oil spills, and the
development of bilateral and multilateral co-operative arrangements to deal with oil spill
emergencies.
The project is being followed up by a second phase through project CEP-22, approved at
the Third Intergovernmental Meeting. All expected outputs were delivered by the project, which
has contributed in a significant manner to the development of an oil spill response capability in
the Caribbean region.
The total cost of the project amounted to US$ 110,697; 69,697 from the CTF and 41,000
from IMO (including 17,000 from USAID).
CEP-12
TOURISM AND ENVIRONMENT IN THE WIDER CARIBBEAN REGION
This project was implemented by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the
Caribbean (ECLAC). Its objectives were to analyze the relationship between tourism, resource
utilization, environment and developmental activities by means of three representative case
studies in the region and to formulate guidelines and recommendations as to how to introduce the
environmental dimension into the tourism industry. The project generated twelve reports on
general aspects of tourism planning and its relationship with the environment and case studies of
specific tourism and environment situations in Antigua, St. Lucia, Belize, St. Kitts-Nevis, Puerto
Rico and Colombia. These reports were analyzed at a meeting of experts held in Port of Spain,
Trinidad and Tobago (2-4 December 1985), in which twenty two experts from the countries of
the region and | representatives of the tourist industry and regional and international
organizations participated. The workshop formulated recommendations on: (a) environmental
impact of tourism development; (b) socio-cultural impacts; and (c) planning and management
mechanisms.
The workshop brought together high level officials from the Ministries of tourism and
planning, tourism and environment and natural resources and the tourism promotion sector. It is
the first time in the Caribbean region that high level tourism officials met to discuss the
relationship between tourism and the environment. Therefore, one of the project's
accomplishments was to help raise the awareness of those responsible for tourism planning and
promotion in the region to the close relationship between environment and tourism. However, as
in other Caribbean Action Plan projects, the question arises as to what follow-up activities are
being undertaken to implement the recommendations of the Workshop. The tourism industry is
extremely importan} t in the Caribbean to small and large countries alike. It is also one of the
development sectors in which environmental integrity is clearly understood to be of essence by
all parties involved. At any rate, the implementation of the Action Plan has not taken advantage
of this coincidence of interests. It is most unfortunate that the results of the workshop, including
the case studies, have not been published and widely circulated among Government and tourist
industry officials in the region, and that follow-up activities are not being supported by the
- 36 -
Action Plan. Even UNEP as Secretariat of the Action Plan has not yet received a full set of
documents.
The total cost of the project was US $82,692; 47,892 from the CTF and 34,800 from
ECLAC.
CEP-13
DIRECTORIES OF MARINE INSTITUTES AND BIBLIOGRAPHIES OF MARINE
POLLUTION
This on-going project is being undertaken in collaboration with FAO. Its objective is to
publish scientific directories and bibliographies in the Environmental Sciences (particul~ arly in
the marine sciences) on both regional and global levels. The Caribbean component of this
project has already published two directories: one on Marine Environmental Centres (1985); and
another on Environmental Education (see CEP-9). A bibliography on marine and coastal
pollution research in the Caribbean is now at press.
Both published directories have been widely distributed to national focal points and
scientific institutions in the region, and have facilitated linkages between national institutions.
The total cost of the Caribbean component of this project has been US$ 70,780; 49,700
from UNEP and 21,080 from FAO.
CEP-14
ENVIRONMENTAL TRAINING PROJECT FOR THE WIDER CARIBBEAN REGION
This is an on-going project that has been implemented internally by UNEP through the
Environmental Training Network which operates out of UNEP's Regional Office for Latin
America and the Caribbean. The project objective was to establish a network of co-operating
institutions for training activities in the region in the areas of Marine Pollution and
Environmental Health. The project has been active in an intermittent fashion. In 1985, a very
substantive meeting of marine research centres was convened by the project in collaboration with
the National University of Mexico, at the Puerto Morelos Marine Station of this institution.
Representatives from seventeen marine research centres of the Caribbean participated in the
meeting. They reviewed a status paper, presented by a consultant, analyzed the training and
research capabilities of the marine laboratories in the region, identified opportunities for co-
operation and adopted a series of guidelines and recommendations for the establishment of a
network of institutions interested in marine pollution research in the region. Concrete and novel
co-operative programmes were defined including the publication of a regional newsletter, the
development of a bibliographic exchange programme and the convening of regional courses in
specific areas of interest. The recommendations were never implemented as there were no
provisions in the project for co-ordination of follow-up activities.
- 37 -
On the Environmental Health component, a similar overview study of the training
capabilities in the region was undertaken. However, the meeting of environmental health
institutions expected to be convened, since early 1987, in collaboration with PAHO has never
taken place. Less than US$ 15,000 is left in the project for this activity, and even if the meeting
is convened there would be no funds available for follow-up.
This project succeeded in generating a great deal of enthusiasm among the marine
research centres of the region. At the Puerto Morelos meeting, the directors or spokesmen of
these institutions conceived concrete self supporting co-operative activities. The only element
lacking was the co-ordination input for the follow-up which was not foreseen in the project. It is
felt that the project deserves to be revised and incorporated into either the marine pollution or the
training projects of the Action Plan, focussing on the follow-up of the Puerto Morelos
recommendations, postponing indefinitely the environmental health component which is already
well developed in the region by PAHO.
The project cost so far has been US$ 46,322 from the CTF.
CEP-15
IOC/UNEP PROJECT IN SUPPORT OF THE CARIPOL REGIONAL PROGRAMME
FOR RESEARCH AND MONITORING OF PETROLEUM POLLUTION IN THE
MARINE ENVIRONMENT
This on-going project is a direct outgrowth of the 1976 Trinidad and Tobago Workshop
on Marine Pollution in the Caribbean and Adjacent Areas (see CEP-2). The workshop noted that
petroleum pollution was of region-wide concern and recommended that the international
organizations sponsoring the workshop initiate a research and monitoring programme to
determine the severity of the problem and monitor its effects. IOC initially followed it up by
working through a steering committee of regional scientists to design a programme to provide
necessary information, and allow laboratories from the region to participate in the monitoring
without the need of expensive, sophisticated equipment. In September 1979, a training exercise
was conducted at the University of Costa Rica to determine how the monitoring observations
were to be carried out. The seminar was conducted in both English and Spanish, and detailed
method manuals were published in both languages.
By 1980, the monitoring programme was fully operational with data being reported to a
central facility operated by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
in Miami, Florida. The monitoring programme has concentrated on four parameters (the last one
having been added recently) related to oil pollution:
(a) tar on beaches;
(b) floating tar;
(c) dissolved/dispersed petroleum hydrocarbons; and
- 38 -
(d) petroleum hydrocarbon residues in sediments and marine organisms.
CARIPOL
participants
have provided more than 9000 observations throughout the
region. The data set collected is one of the largest and most complete in the world, and has
allowed some significant conclusions regarding the status of petroleum pollution in the Wider
Caribbean and its effects.
The programme has been strongly supported by the Caribbean Action Plan which has
allocated funds to it from the CTF since 1984.
The monitoring programme has been supported by extensive training and intercalibration
exercises. In December 1985, a Symposium on research and monitoring of petroleum pollution
was held at the University of Puerto Rico, in La Parguera. Thirty nine participants from eighteen
countries of the region took part in the Symposium. The results have been published in the
Caribbean Journal of Science (Volume 23(1) 1987). A workshop on the analysis of petroleum
hydrocarbons in sediments and marine organisms was held in November 1986, in Puerto
Morelos, Mexico with the co-sponsorship of the National University of Mexico. Twenty
participants from fourteen countries of the region as well as the South Pacific region participated
in the two week workshop. Besides the region wide seminars workshops, training has been
provided through the project at selected host laboratories such as the Bermuda Biological
Station, the University of Puerto Rico and the National University of Mexico.
The programme has been one of the most successful regional activities being supported
by the Caribbean Action Plan. The project objectives have been met and exceeded. The project
has yielded respectable scientific data for a serious assessment of petroleum pollution in the
Caribbean. A team of scientists from the region have recently published an article (Oceanus,
Vol. 30, Number 4, Winter 1987/88 pp. 25-32) summarizing some of the findings of the
CARIPOL project.
The total cost of the programme from 1984 until 1987 amounts to US$÷285,458
(distributed as follows: 115,958 from CTF; 123,500 from IOC; 12,000 from the Bermuda
Biological Station; 5,000 from the University of Puerto Rico; and 30,000 from the National
University of Mexico).
CEP-16
DEVELOPMENT OF SPECIFIC METHODOLOGIES FOR THE PREPARATION OF
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT IN THE WIDER CARIBBEAN
This on-going project is being implemented by the Government of Mexico through its
Secretariat for Urban Development and Ecology. The objective of the project is to develop
through three case studies environmental impact assessment methodologies suited to the
characteristics of the coastal environments of the States and territories of the Wider Caribbean.
The case studies and the methodologies would be reviewed in a region-wide workshop to be held
- 39 -
in late 1988. The case studies selected will involve Mexico, Cuba and Barbados. As the project
is still in its initial stages no evaluation of its accomplishments is yet possible.
The total budget of the project is US$ 151,611; 88,000 from the CTF and 63,611 from the
Government of Mexico.
CEP-17
IUCN'S ASSISTANCE TO INTER-REGIONAL ACTIVITIES ON CORAL REEF
MANAGEMENT
The project, IUCN's Assistance to Interregional Activities on Coral Reef Management, is
currently ongoing. Its major activity is the preparation of three regional directories on coral reefs
(about 150 pages each) covering the Indian Ocean, the Caribbean and the Pacific regions,
altogether including seven Regional Seas Action Plan areas. The directories will contain an
inventory and description of physical and biological characteristics of individual coral reefs, as
well as of management practices relevant to them.
The project's total commitment is US$ 59,750, of which US$ 44,750 is from the
Environment Fund. For the Caribbean component, the costs are estimated at US$ 6,000 from the
Environment Fund and US$ 2,000 counterpart contribution from IUCN.
CEP-18
DEMONSTRATION WORKSHOP FOR THE TREATMENT OF RUM DISTILLERY
WASTES BY METHANIZATION
This project was implemented by the "Association pour le Developpement des Activites
des Ingenieurs Français a l'Etranger" in collaboration with the French Ministry of the
Environment. The objective of the project was to assist countries of the Caribbean region in
setting up adequate waste treatment practices in their own rum distilleries, the long-term
objective being to help control one significant land-based source of coastal pollution, the waste
from rum distilleries and sugar mills. The project consisted of the convening of a workshop to
demonstrate methanization as a process to recycle wastes from rum distilleries. The workshop
held in Guadeloupe in 1986, was attended by fifteen trainees from Caribbean countries.
Proceedings and documents from the workshop were limitedly distributed. The project reflected
an interesting approach, the choice of economically attractive solutions to environmental
problems, in this case, the generation of methane from rum distillery wastes. However, the
project was designed in a limited fashion with no follow-up or widespread dissemination of
materials envisaged in its planning. The implementation of one shot workshops has proved to be
a dead end strategy for training and transference of technology. The trainees are in most cases
not motivated or capable of putting into practice the techniques hastily learned in the workshop.
- 40 -
Although the seminar in itself might be considered to have been partially successful, the
project failed to come near to the attainment of its long term objectives.
The total cost of the project was US$ 68,518; 25,418 from the CTF and 43,100 from the
French Ministry of the Environment.
CEP-19
PROMOTION OF THE SURVIVAL AND RECOVERY OF ENDANGERED
THREATENED AND VULNERABLE SEA TURTLES IN THE CARIBBEAN REGION
This on-going project is being implemented by Monitor International and the Wider
Caribbean Sea Turtle Recovery Team, assisted by the Wider Caribbean Sea Turtle Conservation
Network. Its short-term objective is to provide the Governments of the Wider Caribbean region
with sea turtle management recommendations in the form of highly specific sea turtle recovery
and conservation plans for their consideration and possible implementation.
Its long-term objectives include providing a demonstration project relevant to future
projects for other endangered and threatened species responding to the endangered species
section of APCEP 6-1 of the Action Plan. The project carries out its plan writing activities
through an international WIDECAST team of eleven members and country WIDECAST task
forces within the framework of the Wider Caribbean Sea Turtle Conservation Network.
Fifty-seven percent of the plans are in their first or second stages of development and all
plans are scheduled for completion by the end of 1989.
The government delegations of the Third Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan
(Cancún, 1985), approved the project, based on the view that the project met the criteria for
project acceptance and was in keeping with the objectives of the Action Plan.
The total budget for the project is US$ 345,000; 27,000 from the CTF and 318,000 from
Monitor International and other sources, including $ 60,000 from the United States of America.
CEP-20
DEVELOPMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION AND PUBLIC AWARENESS
ON MARINE AND COASTAL RESOURCES MANAGEMENT IN THE WIDER
CARIBBEAN REGION
This project is a continuation of CEP-9. It is being implemented by the Caribbean
Conservation Association and has as its principal objective the establishment of an information
and communication network, to support the development of environmental education in the
countries of the Caribbean. The expected outputs are:
- 41 -
(a) a regional information centre established within CCA to service the Governments and NGOs
of the region;
(b) a network of institutions and experts working on marine environment education;
(c) publications and resource materials for teachers;
(d) four issues of the Caribbean Environment News; and
(e) the design of a pilot workshop for teacher training on marine environment.
This activity was recently initiated and is not yet possible to evaluate its results.
The total budget of the project is US$ 130,504: 40,504 from the Environment Fund of
UNEP (including 18,504 in NCC); 76,000 from the CTF; and 14,000 from CCA.
CEP-21
FEASIBILITY OF ESTABLISHING BIOSPHERE RESERVES IN THE LESSER
ANTILLES NOTABLY AS DEMONSTRATION AREAS FOR REGIONAL CO-
OPERATION IN DEVELOPING SOUND ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
PRACTICES
This project was recently initiated, implemented by UNESCO in association with the
Caribbean Conservation Association. Its chief objective is to determine the feasibility of
establishing and nominating one or two multiple site reserves in the Lesser Antilles region for
inclusion in the international biosphere reserve network.
The total budget of the project is US$ 97,900: 64,900 from CTF and 33,000 from
UNESCO.
CEP-22
SUB-REGIONAL OIL SPILL CONTINGENCY PLANNING IN THE WIDER
CARIBBEAN (PHASE II)
This project has just recently started, and is being implemented by the International
Maritime Organization (IMO) in co-operation with the Governments of the region. It purports to
continue the development of oil spill contingency planning measures for the islands of the
Caribbean and for the northern tier countries of South America.
The total budget for this project is US$ 168,500: 104,500 from the CTF and 64,000 from
IMO.
CEP-23
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT OF BAYS AND COASTAL ZONES IN THE
WIDER CARIBBEAN
- 42 -
This activity is being implemented jointly by UNESCO and the Institute of Transport
Research of Cuba. Initial activities have included a planning meeting in Mexico City in March
1988. National research institutions of six countries are participating in this project (Colombia,
Cuba, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama and Venezuela). Its main objective is to analyze on a case
study basis the environmental situation of several bays and coastal areas in the region using
compatible methodologies in order to propose appropriate management schemes.
The total budget for this project is US$ 341,000: 90,000 from the CTF; 15,000 from
UNESCO; and 236,000 from the Government of Cuba.
- 43 -
ANNEX II
LIST OF FOCAL POINTS OF THE CARIBBEAN
ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME
BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS
CAYMAN ISLANDS
His Exc. H.L. Stoutt
His Excellency The Governor
Chief Minister
Office of the Governor
Chief Minister's Office
Government House
Government Headquarters
Grand Cayman
Road Town, Tortola
Cayman Islands
British Virgin Islands
Telephone: (1) 809-494-3701
Telephone: (1) 809-949-2290/4321
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (292) 7984 VIRILE VB
Telex: (293) 4260 CIGOVT CP
Telefax/facsimile: Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail
Electronic mail:
COLOMBIA
COSTA RICA
Excmo. Sr. Julio Londoño Paredes
Excmo. Sr. Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores
Ministro
Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores yo Culto
Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores
Attn: Lic. Sara Faingezicht de Gloobe
Palacio San Carlos
Subdirectora General a.i. de Org. Int.
Bogotá
Apartado 10.027
Colombia
San José
Costa
Rica
Telephone: (57) 1-243-8132/242-1501/282-
Telephone: (506) 33-05-22/33-08-79
7811
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (35) 44394/45209/45413 MRRE CO Telex: (376) 2107 RREE CR
Telefax/facsimile: 283-8441
Telefax/facsimile: (506) 23-93-28
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
CUBA
DOMINICA
Sr. Pedro Morales Carballo
The Hon. Miss Eugenia Charles
Director
Prime Minister & Minister of External Affairs,
Comité Estatal de Colaboración Económica
Development and Projects
Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores
Ministry of External Affairs
Calle Primera Núm 2- 01, Esq. AB
Office of the Prime Minister
Vedado
Government Headquarters
- 44 -
La Habana 4
Kennedy Avenue
Cuba
Roseau
Dominica
Telephone: (53) 3-4019
Telephone: (1) 809-448-2401 Ext. 244
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (28) 511404 CECE CU
Telex: (394) 8613 EXTERNAL DO
Telefax/facsimile: 30-1394
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
EUROPEAN ECONOMIC COMMUNITY
Excmo. Sr. José Augusto Vega Imbert
His Exc. Mr. Jacques Delors
Secretario de Estado
President
Secretario de Estado de Relaciones Exteriores
European Economic Community (EEC)
Avenida Independencia
Commission of the European Communities
Santo Domingo
200, rue de la Loi
Dominican Republic
1049 Brussels
Telephone: (1) 809-533-3010/4121
Belgium
Cable:
Telephone: (32) 235-1111
Telex: ACR-ITT (346) 0014 SECRETA/ Cable:
RCA (326) 4192 ESTADO DR
Telex: (46) 21877 COMEU B
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile: (32) 236-2725
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
FRANCE
GRENADA
Ministère des Affaires Etrangères
The Hon. Ben Joseph Jones
Direction des Aff. economiques et financières
Minister
Service des Affaires Générales
Ministry of Agriculture, Tourism and External
Attn: Jean François Thiollier
Affairs,
37 Quai d'Orsay, 75700 Paris
St. George's, Grenada
France
Telephone: (33) 1-4555-9540
Telephone:
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (42) 270819 AFEIP F/202329 AESTG Telex: (395) 3423 GRENEX GA
F
Telefax/facsimile: (33) 1-4551-0906
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
GUATEMALA
GUYANA
Excmo. Sr. Alfonso Cabrera Hidalgo
His Exc. Cde. Rashleigh E. Jackson, M.P.
Ministro
Minister
- 45 -
Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Palacio Nacional
Takuba Lodge
Cd. de Guatemala
254 South Rd. and New Garden St.
Guatemala
Georgetown
Guyana
Telephone: (502) 221212
Telephone: (592) 2-61606 to 9/68426
Cable:
Cable: FOREIGN GUYANA
Telex: (372) 5321 RELEX GU
Telex: (295) 2220 FOREIGN GY
Telefax/facsimile: (502) 516745
Telefax/facsimile: (592) 2-59192
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
HAITI
HONDURAS
Son Exc. Lt. Gen. Jean Batisse Hilaire
Excmo. Sr. Carlos López Contreras
Secretaire d'Etat
Ministro
Dep. d'Etat des Affaires Etrangères
Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores
et des Cultes
Tegucigalpa
Port-au-Prince Honduras
Haiti
Telephone: (509) 21649/21242/25863
Telephone: (504) 31-4200
Cable: Cable:
Telex: (203) 0394 DPTAFET
Telex: (374) 1129 MMRREE HO
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
-
JAMAICA MEXICO
The Rt. Hon. Hugh Lawson Shearer
Excmo. Sr. Fernando Solana
Deputy Prime Minister &
Secretario
Minister of For. Aff., Trade & Industry
Secretario de Relaciones Exteriores
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Trade & Industry Nonoalco 1, Tlaltelolco
85 Knutsford Boulevard
Homero 213 - Piso 10
Kingston 5
Mexico 3, D.F.
Jamaica
Mexico
Telephone: (1) 809-926-4220 to 9/926-4416 Telephone:
(905)
525-529-3303/250-9540
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (291 or 381) 2114 EXTERNAL JA;
Telex: (22) 01772531 SRE ME
2374 FOREIGN JA
Telefax/facsimile: 782-4109
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
MONTSERRAT
NETHERLANDS
- 46 -
The Hon. Christopher John Turner, OBE
His Excellency The Minister
Governor
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Directoroe ate on Environmental Protection Bezuidenhoutseweg
67
Government House
P.O. Box 20061
Plymouth
2500 EB The Hague, Netherlands
Montserrat
Telephone: (31) 70-486486
Telephone: (1) 809-491-2409
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (44) 31326 BUZA NL
Telex: (396) 5727 BE OAG MK
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
NETHERLANDS ANTILLES
NICARAGUA
Director
Excmo. Padre Miguel d'Escoto Brockmann
Department for Foreign Affairs
Ministro
Attn: Mr. Eric Keinmoedia
Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores
Fort Amsterdan
Detras de "Los Ranchos"
Willemstad, Curaçao
Managua, Nicaragua
Netherlands Antilles
Telephone: (599) 613988
Telephone:(505) 2-96563/96272
Cable: Cable:
Telex: (390) 1079 ALSEC NA
Telex: (375) 1213 MIFIN NK
Telefax/facsimile: Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
PANAMA
ST. KITTS AND NEVIS
The Hon. Dr. Kennedy Simmonds
Excmo. Sr. Ministro
Prime Minister
Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Panamá 4
Government Headquarters
Panamá
P.O. Box 186
Basseterre
St. Kitts and Nevis
Telephone: (507) 25-1072/1209
Telephone: (1) 809-465-2521 Ext. 1043
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (377) 2771 EXTPAN PG
Telex: (397) 6820 EXTNL SKB KC
Telefax/facsimile: 27-4725
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
ST. LUCIA
ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
The Hon. Emmanuel Neville Cenac
- 47 -
Minister
The Hon. James Fitz-Allen Mitchell
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Minister
Brazil Street
Ministry of External Affairs
Castries
Kingstown
St. Lucia
St. Vincent and the Grenadines
Telephone: (1) 809-452-2275/6
Telephone: (1) 809-457-1632
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (398) 6394 FORAFF LC
Telex: (399) 7484 FOREIGN V
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
SURINAME
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
The Hon. Errol Mahabir
His Exc. Eddy Sedoc
Minister
Minister
Ministry of External Affairs, International
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Marketing and Tourism
Paramaribo
Queen's Park West, Port-of-Spain
Suriname Trinidad
and
Tobago
Telephone: (597) 74600/74805/77030
Telephone: (1) 809-623-4116
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (304) 118/132 ALBUZA SN Telex:
(294)
22549 TRINAGO WG
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
TURKS AND CAICOS
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Mr. Nicholas MacNeil
His Exc. The Governor
International Relations Officer, OES/ENH
Office of Foreign Affairs
U.S. Department of State
Governor's Office
Room 4325
Providenciales, Grand Turk
2201 C Street, NW
Turks and Caicos
Washington DC 20520
Tele¡ phone: (1) 809-946-2309
U.S.A.
Cable:
Telephone: (1) 202-467-9169
Telex: (296) 8212 GOVTCI TQ
Cable:
Electronic mail:
UNITED KINGDOM
VENEZUELA
Head
Excmo. Sr. Germán Nava Carrillo
Maritime, Aviation and Environment
Ministro
Department
Foreign and Commonwealth Office
Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores
Whitehall
Conde a Carmelitas
- 48 -
London SW1 2AH
Casa Amarilla
United Kingdom
Caracas 101
Telephone: (44) 1-270-2620
Venezuela
Cable:
Telephone:
(58)
2-810-169/818-851/834-
666/816-657
Telex: (51) 297711 PRODROME G
Cable:
Telefax/facsimile: (44) 1-930-2121
Telex: (31) 24104/24105/26585 EXTER VC
Electronic mail:
Telefax/facsimile: (58¢ ) 2-826487/831376
Electronic
mail:
Government agencies responsible for management of marine and coastal resources in the
Wider Caribbean
ANGUILLA
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA
Director
His Exc. The Minister
Directorate on Environmental Protection
Ministry of Economic Development, Tourism
and Energy,
Government House
Road Town
Queen Elizabeth Highway, St. John's
Anguilla
Antigua and Barbuda
Telephone: (1) 809-497-2622
Telephone: (1) 809-462-6092/9
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (391) 9351 GOV AXA LA Telex: (393) 2122 EXTERNAL AK
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
ARUBA
BAHAMAS
¤
Mr. Ronald W. Thomas
Mr. Gerald Adolf Engelbrecht
Director
Director
Department of Fisheries
Environmental Protection Division
Min. of Agriculture, Fisheries and Local Govt.
Ministry of Public Works
Corner of Mackey and Bay Streets
Kerkstraat 16 C
P.O. Box N-3028
Oranjestad
Nassau, N.P.
Aruba
Bahamas
Telephone: (297) 23073/24571
Telephone: (1) 809-323-1014/15/96/322-177
to 9
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (390) 5060 BSKAR NA
Telex:
Telefax/facsimile: (297) 2-33895
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
BARBADOS
BELIZE
- 49 -
Mr. Ruall C. Harris
Mr. Vincent Gillett
Permanent Secretary
Fisheries Administrator
Min. of Employment, Labour Relations & Fisheries Unit
Community Development
Ministry of Agriculture
Marine House, Hastings
Princess Margaret Drive
Christchurch, St. Michael 29
Belize City
Barbados
Belize
Telephone: (1) 809-427-5420/426-2888 Telephone: (501) 2-44552
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (392) 386222
Telex: (371) 102 FOREIGN BZ
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
BRITISH VIRGIN ISLANDS
CAYMAN ISLANDS
Ms. Ethyln Smith
Mr. K.S. Gomez
Permanent Secretary
Principal Secretary
Ministry of Natural Resources and Labour Development and Natural Resources
Government House
Cayman Islands Government
Road Town, Tortola
Government Administration Building
British Virgin Islands
Grand Cayman
Telephone: (1) 809-494-3701
Cayman Islands
Cable:
Telephone: (1) 809-94-98018
Telex: (292) 7959 CENAD VB
Cable:
Telefax/facsimile:
Telex: (293) 4260 CIGOVT CP
Electronic mail:
Telefax/facsimile: (1) 809-949-7544
Electronic mail:
COLOMBIA
COSTA RICA
Sr. Germán García Durán
Gerente General
Ing. Frederico Paredes V.
Ins. Nac. de los Rec. Nat.
Coordinador PNUMA
Renov. y del Ambiente (INDERENA)
Ministerio de Recursos Naturales, Energía y
Minas
Ministerio de Agricultura
Apartado 10104
Apartado Aéreo 13458
San José 1000
Diagonal 34 no 5-18, Bogotá
Costa Rica
Colombia
Telephone: (57) 1-28-54417/72362/
Telephone: (506) 334533/334025
75768/78259/78029
Cable:
Cable:
- 50 -
Telex: (35) 44428 INDE CO
Telex: (376) 2363 ENERGIA CR
Telefax/facsimile: Telefax/facsimile:
(506)
570697
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
CUBA
DOMINICA
Sr. Helenio Ferrer
Vice-Presidente
His Excellency the Hon. Charles Maynard
Comisión de Medio Ambiente y
Ministry of Agriculture, Trade and Tourism
Recursos Naturales (COMARNA)
Government Headquarters
Academia de Ciencias de Cuba (ACC)
Roseau
Ave 17, No 5008 e/ 50752
Dominica
Playa, La Habana
Cuba
Telephone: (53) 223594
Telephone: (1) 809-448-2401 ext. 282
Cable:
Cable:
Telex:
Telex: (394) 8613 EXTERNAL DO
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DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
EUROPEAN ECONOMIC COMMUNITY
Excmo. Señor
Mr. Anthony J. Fairclough
Secretario Técnico de la Presidencia
Director General
Ave México, Esq. Leopoldo Navarro Directorate General VIII
Piso 14
Commission of the European Communities
Santo Domingo
200 rue de la Loi
Dominican Republic
1049 Brussels
Belgium
Telephone:
Telephone: (32) 235-1111
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: via UNDP 3480115 UNATION Telex: (46) 21877 COMEU B
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile: (32) 236-2725
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
FRANCE
GRENADA
M. Serge Antoine
Ms. Ruth Rahim
Mission Environnement et Développement Permanent Secretary
Ministère de l'Environnement
Ministry of Health and Housing
14 Boulevard du General Leclerc
92524 Neuilly sur Seine Cedex
St. George's
France
Grenada
- 51 -
Telephone: (33) 1-758-1212
Telephone:
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: 620602 DENVIR F
Telex: (395) 3423 GRENEX GA
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
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GUATEMALA
GUYANA
Sr. Jorge Arturo Cabrera Hidalgo
Dr. Walter Chin
Coordinador
Head
Comisión Nacional del Medio Ambiente
Agency for Health Sciences, Education
Presidencia de la República
Environment and Food Policy,
7A Avenida 4-35, Zona 1
Liliendaal, Greater Georgetown
Cd. de Guatemala
Guyana
Guatemala
Telephone: (592) 2-57523
Telephone: (502) 21816/532477/535109
Cable:
Cable:
Telex:
Telex:
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
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HAITI
HONDURAS
Lic. Horacio Erazmo Martínez
Son Exc. le Secrétaire d'Etat
Director Unidad del Medio Ambiente
Ministère du Plan
Consejo Superior de Planificación Económica
Palais des Ministères
Sucursal Banco Atlántida, Apdo. Postal 1327
Port-au-Prince
Comayaguela, D.C.
Haiti
Tegucigalpa
Honduras
Telephone: (509) 27508/20700/21027/20819 Telephone: (504) 22-0379/1219/2538
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (203) 0394 DPTAFET
Telex: (374) 1222 CIDAPLAN HO
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
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JAMAICA
MEXICO
His Exc. Percival Broderick
Sr. Ricardo Govela Autrey
Minister
Jefe de Asuntos Internacionales
Ministry of Agriculture
Secretaria de Desarrollo Urbano y Ecologia
(SEDUE)
Hope Gardens
Rio Elba No 20
Kingston
Col. Cuauhtémoc, 16 Piso,
Jamaica
CP 06500 México D.F.
Telephone: (809) 927-1731/1743
México
Cable:
Telephone: (905) 525-271-2557/2812
- 52 -
Telex: (381) 2411 MINAG JA
Cable:
Telefax/facsimile:
Telex: (22) 1771198 SEDU ME
Electronic mail:
Telefax/facsimile: (905) 525-271-2687
Electronic mail:
MONTSERRAT
NETHERLANDS
Mr. Fitzroy L. Grant
Mr. Jaap Pieters
Permanent Secretary
Director of Nature, Environment
Ministry of Agriculture, Trade,
and Wildlife Management,
Lands and Housing
Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries
The Groves, Plymouth
P.O. Box 20401, 2500 EK The Hague
Montserrat
Netherlands
Telephone: (1) 809-491-3648
Telephone: (31) 70-793911
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: 5720 MNIGOVT MK
Telex: (44) 32040 LAVI NL
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
NETHERLANDS ANTILLES
NICARAGUA
Mr. Carol J.A. Elassaiss
Sr. Jairo Rodriguez
Director
Director General
Department of Health and Environmental Instituto Nic. de Recursos Naturales
Hygiene
y del Ambiente (IRENA), Apdo. Postal 5123
Ministry of Public Health
y 1347
Heelsum Str. Z/N
Km. 12 1/2 Carretera Norte
Willemstad, Curacao
Managua
Netherlands Antilles
Nicaragua
Telephone: (599) 614555
Telephone:
(505)
2-31110/31115/31594-
98/31906
Cable/Telegram: DEPSALUD, Curaçao Cable:
Telex: (390) 1079
Telex: (375) 1328 INFOCASA NK
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
PANAMA
ST. KITTS AND NEVIS
Sr. Jorge E. Illueca Bonnett
Permanent Secretary
Secretario Ejecutivo
Ministry of Agriculture, Lands, Housing
Comisión Nacional del Medio Ambiente and Development, Government Headquarters
(CONAMA)
Edificio 1069 - Curundu
P.O. Box 186
Casilla Postal 10120
Basseterre
Panamá, Zona 4
St. Kitts and Nevis
Panamá
Telephone: (1) 809-465-2521 Ext. 1008/1025
Telephone: (507) 32-6055/6125
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (397) 6820 EXTNL SKB KC
Telex: via PNUD (377) 2684 UNDEV Telefax/facsimile:
- 53 -
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
ST. LUCIA
ST. VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES
Mr. Cornelius Lubin
Permanent Secretary
His Excellency The Minister
Min. of Health, Housing, Labour,
Ministry of the Environment
Inform. and Broadcasting
Kingstown
P.O. Box 926, Chaussee Road
St. Vincent and the Grenadines
Castries
Telephone:
St. Lucia
Cable:
Telephone: (1) 809-452-2827/2611
Telex:
Cable: Telefax/facsimile:
Telex: (398) 6394 FORAFF LC
Electronic mail:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
SURINAME
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
His Excellency The Minister
His Excellency The Minister
Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Husb.,
Ministry of Food Production, Marine
Fisheries & Forestry
Exploration, Forestry and the Environment,
Attn: Mr. Ferdinand Baal, Hoofd
St. Clair, Port-of-Spain
Landsbosbeheer
Cornelis Jongbauwstraat no. 50
Trinidad and Tobago
Paramaribo
Telephone: (1) 809-622-5596
Suriname
Cable:
Telephone: (597) 74177
Telex:
Cable: Telefax/facsimile:
Telex:
Electronic mail:
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
TURKS AND CAICOS
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
His Excellency Lewelyn Handfield
Mr. Arthur Paterson
Director of Environment & Nat. Heritage
International Relations Officer
Ministry of Natural Resources
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Government Offices, Pan Am Base
Administration (NOAA), Department of
Commerce
P.O. Box 66
3300 Whitehaven St., N.W.
Providenciales, Grand Turk
Washington, DC 20235
Turks and Caicos
U.S.A.
Telephone: (1) 809-946-2143
Telephone: (1) 202-647-9169
Cable:
Cable:
Telex:
Telex: ITT 440051 dcom ui/RCA 248475
dcom ur
- 54 -
Telefax/facsimile: (1) 809-946-2448
Telefax/facsimile:
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
-
UNITED KINGDOM
VENEZUELA
Head
Sra. Lorena S. de Quintero
International Division
Directora General de ODEPRI
Central Directorate on Environmental
Ministerio del Ambiente y de Recursos
Protection (CDEP)
Naturales Renovables, MARNR/ODEPRI
Dept. of the Environment
Torre Sur, Piso 25
43 Marsham Street
Centro Simón Bolívar
London SW1P 3EB
Caracas 1010
United Kingdom
Venezuela
Telephone: (44) 1-276-8380
Telephone: (58) 2-408-1090/483-3164/1070
Cable:
Cable:
Telex: (51) 22221 DOEMAR G
Telex: (31) 24305 MARNR VC
Telefax/facsimile:
Telefax/facsimile: (58) 2-483-2445
Electronic mail:
Electronic mail:
- 55 -
ANNEX III
MEETINGS CONVENED WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OF THE
ACTION PLAN FOR THE CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT
PROGRAMME
PREPARATORY MEETINGS:
NO. OF
PARTICIPANTS
1.
Second Session of UNEP's Governing Council, 8 November 1974
2.
IUCN Central American Meeting on Management of Natural and
Cultural Resources, Costa Rica, December 1974
3.
Third Session of UNEP's Governing Council, 1975.
4.
IDOE International Workshop on Marine Geology and Geophysics of
the Caribbean Region and its Resources, Kingston, Jamaica, 17-22
February 1975
5. IOC Training, Education and Mutual Assistance (TEMA), Mexico
50
City, April 1975. Report: IOC Workshop Report No. 5
6. Ad hoc Group of Experts held in conjunction with IOC and
University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez, 1-4 March 1976.
7.
Latin American Preparatory Meeting for Fourth Session of Governing
Council, Caracas, Venezuela, 4-8 March 1976
8. Fourth International Parliamentary Conference on the Environment,
Kingston, Jamaica, 12-14 April 1976
9.
Fourth Session of UNEP's Governing Council, 1976
10. Interagency Meeting on Regional Seas, Paris, 16-18 June 1976
Report: UNEP/IAMRS
24
11. Joint Programming Meeting, UN/ESA and UNEP, 28-29 October
31
1976
12. IOC/FAO/UNEP Workshop on Marine Pollution in the Caribbean and
30
Adjacent Waters, Port of Spain, 13-17 December 1976. Report:
E/CEPAL/PROY.3/L
13. UNEP/CEPAL Joint Programming Meeting, Santiago,21-23 February
19
1977
14.
International Workshop on the Prevention, Abatement and
Combatting of Pollution from Ships in the Caribbean, Cartagena, 23-
27 October 1978
Report: Texas A & M Research Foundation/IMCO
42
15. First Meeting of the Planning Officials of ECLA's CDCC, Havana,
Cuba, February 1979
- 56 -
16. First Workshop of the OAS Caribbean Oil Pollution Task Force, Port
of Spain, 7-11 May 1979.Report: OAS, 1979.Framework of a
Caribbean Regional Oil Spill Plan.O.A.S., Washington, D.C.
PREPARATORY MEETINGS: NO. OF PARTICIPANTS
17. UAOFDA/AID Caribbean Disaster Preparedness Seminar, St. Lucia,
155
10-20 June 1979 Report:E/CEPAL/PROY.3/L.INF.21-22
18. CARICOM Health Ministers, Antigua, July 1979
19. USMAB/CDB/UN/UNEP/UNESCO Conference on Environmental
75
Management and Economic Growth in the Smaller Caribbean Islands,
Barbados, 17-21 Sept. 1979 Report: E/CEPAL/PEOY.3/L.INF.17
20. ECLA/CDCC/UNSO/UNEP Caribbean Workshop on Environment
30
Statistics, Port of Spain, 7-11 January 1980
Report:E/CEPAL/CDCC/56
21. First Meeting of Government-nominated Experts to Review the Draft
Action Plan for the Wider Caribbean Region, Caracas, 28 Jan.-1 Feb.
1980
Report: E/CEPAL/PROY.3/L
22.. OAS/IMO/UNEP/USMAB Meetin¹ g of the Smaller Caribbean
49
Islands on Oil Spill Contingency Planning, San Juan, 16-20 June 1980
Report: OAS, Washington, D.C
23. OAS/IMO/UNEP/MAB Meeting of Caribbean Islands on Oil Spill
57
Contingency Planning, Barbados, 24-28 November 1980
Report:UNEP/CEPAL/WG.48/INF.29
24. Second Meeting of Government-nominated Experts to Review the
Draft Action Plan for the Wider Caribbean Region, Managua, 23-27
February 1981
Report: UNEP/CEPAL/WG.48/486
25. Seminar on the Legal Practice for the Protection of the Marine
Environment Against Pollution, Bogotá, 4-8 May, 1981 Report:
CPPS, Serie Seminarios y Estudios, No. 4, 1981.
26. Meeting of Legal Experts on Draft Regional Agreements for the
Wider Caribbean Region, United Nations, N.Y., 7-11 December 1981
Report: CEPI/14.
27. Second Meeting of Experts on Draft Regional Agreements for the
Wider Caribbean Region, New York, 7-16 July, 1982.
Report:UNEP/WG.74. 31
28. Third Meeting of Experts on Draft Regional Agreements for the
Wider Caribbean Region, Cartagena de Indias, 14-18 March 1983
Report: UNEP/WG. 76
42
- 57 -
29.. CCA/UNESCO(MAB)/US National Park Service Workshop on
Biosphere Reserves and Other Protected Areas for Sustainable
Development of Small Caribbean Islands, Caneel Bay, St. John, U.S.
Virgin Islands, 10-12 May 1983
Report: Proceedings (U.S. National Park Service)43
30. IMO/OAS/UNEP Government Experts Meeting on Sub-regional Oil
Spill Contingency Planning for Island States and Territories of the
Wider Caribbean, St. Lucia, 7-11 May 1984
Report: IMO/OAS/UNEP/WG.1
35.
31. Environmental Education Workshop for Caribbean Media Personnel,
Barbados, 6-8 June 1984
Report: UNEP ProjectFP/CR/5102-82-12(2364) Rev.1
19
32. UNDP/ECLAC Collective Consultative Meeting to determine the
priorities of the Regional Programme for Latin America and the
Caribbean for the 4th UNDP Programming Cycle:1987-1991, Mexico
City, 25 April 1987
Report: DP/RCA/3/WP/2
B.INTER-GOVERNMENTAL MEETINGS:
1.
First Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the Caribbean
Environment Programme, Montego Bay, 6-8 April 1981.
Report: UNEP/CEPAL/IG.27/3
85
2.
Conference of Plenipotentiaries on the Protection and Development of
the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean Region, Cartagena
de Indias, ¼ 21-24 March 1983
Report: UNEP/IG.39
72
3. Second Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the
Caribbean Environment Programme, Cartagena de Indias, 24-
26March 1983
Report: UNEP/IG.42/3
54
4. Third Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the
54
Caribbean Environment Programme, Cancún, 24-26 April 1985
Report: UNEP/IG.55/4
5. Fourth Intergovernmental Meeting on the Action Plan for the
Caribbean Environment Programme and First Meeting of the
Contracting Parties to the Convention for the Protection and
Development of the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean
Region, Guadeloupe, 26-28 October 1987
Report: UNEP(OCA)/CAR IG.2/4
79
- 58 -
C.MONITORING COMMITTEE MEETINGS
1.
First Meeting of the Monitoring Committee on the Action Plan for the
Caribbean Environment Programme, New York, 14-16 December
1981
Report: UNEP/½ IG.30/6
40
2. Second Meeting of the Monitoring Committee of the Caribbean
Environment Programme, Cartagena, 17-19 March 1983
Report:UNEP/IG.38/6 34
3. Third Meeting of the Monitoring Committee of the Caribbean
Environment Programme, Havana, 8-11 November 1983
Report:UNEP/IG.46/6 32
4.
Fourth Meeting of the Monitoring Committee on the Action Plan for
the Caribbean Environment Programme, Cancún, 21-23 April 1985.
Report: UNEP/IG.54/55
5.
Fifth Meeting of the Monitoring Committee on the Action Plan for the
Caribbean Environment Programme, Kingston, 11-13May 1987
Report: UNEP/IG.67/5
35
6. Sixth Meeting of the Monitoring Committee on the Action Plan for
the Caribbean Environment Programme, Guadeloupe, 21-23 October
1987
Report: UNEP(OCA)/CAR IG.1/5
61
7.
Seventh Meeting of the Monitoring Committee on the Action Plan for
the Caribbean Environment Programme, Mexico City, 12-14
September 1988
Report: UNEP(OCA)/CAR IG. 3/
57
D: .TECHNICAL MEETINGS OF THE ACTION PLAN:
1. Seminar on the Responsibilities of the On-Scene Co-ordinator
Commander during a Pollution Incident, Puerto Rico, 1981
2.
Consultants Orientation Workshop CARICOM/UNEP Project for the
Protection of the Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean
Islands, Castries, St. Lucia, 16-20 February 1981
Report: CARICOM Rep. 81/1/10 MCE
18
3. First Meeting to Review the UNEP/CARICOM Project FP/0503-80-
07 and to initiate work on Coastal Pollution Monitoring Service,
Morne, St. Lucia
15-16 October 1981
Report: CARICOM
8
4. Second Meeting to Review the UNEP/CARICOM Project for the
Protection of the Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean
- 59 -
Islands, St. Lucia, 15-17 March 1982
Report: CARICOM Rep. 82/2/29 MCE
12
5. First Meeting of the Consultants to review the UNEP/CARICOM
Project for the Protection of the Marine and Coastal Environment of
the Caribbean Islands, Kingston, Jamaica, 19-21 April 1982
Report: CARICOM Rep. 82/1/45 C/MCE
8
6.
Meeting of the Technical Advisory Committee to the
UNEP/CARICOM Project for the Protection of the Marine and
Coastal Environment of the Caribbean
Islands, Barbados, 28 October 1982
Report: CARICOM
7
7. OAS/IMO/USAID/Govt. of Puerto Rico, Workshop on Oil Pollution
Regulation and Enforcement, San Juan, 11-15 October 1982
Report: O.A.S, Washington, D.C.
8. IMO/UNEP/OAS Workshop on Oil Spills and Shoreline Cleanup,
Barbados, 31 January-4 February 1983.
9. IMO/OAS/UNEP Sub-Regional Oil Spill Workshop for Central
America, Mexico, and Panama, Panama City, 24-29 October 1983
Report: OAS, 1983, Washington, D.C.
42
10. Fourth Symposium on Research and Control of Marine Pollution and
First Workshop on Environmental Management of Bays in the
Caribbean, Havana, 19-24 September 1983
11. Meeting of the Technical Advisory Committee and the Agencies
Involved in the Caribbean Environmental Health Institute Project,
Castries, St. Lucia, 26-28 October 1983
Report: CARICOM Rep. 83/1/89 TAC/CEHI
8
12. Eighth Session of the Caribbean Development and Co-operation
Committee, Port-au-Prince, 6-8 June 1984
Report:E/CEPAL/G.1317, E/CEPAL/CDCC/G.118
83
13. Meeting of Officials and Ninth Meeting of the Conference of
Ministers and Responsible for Health of the Caribbean Community,
Dominica, 22-24, 25-27 July 1984
Report: 84/9/36 CMH
114
14.
USCG On-Scene Co-ordinator Regional Response Team Simulation
Exercise, Puerto Rico, May 1984
15.
Seminar on Marine Pollution Response, Tampico, 1-5 Oct. 1984
Report: OAS, 1984, Mexico National Pollution Contingency Plan,
Washington, D.C.
16. Second Meeting of the Inter-Agency Group on the Caribbean
Environmental Health Project, Castries, St. Lucia, 1 December 1984
Report: CARICOM Rep. 84/2/56 IA/CEHP 7
- 60 -
17.
Second Workshop on Environmental Management of Bay
Ecosystems in the Caribbean, Havana, December 1984
18. Meeting of Marine Research Institutions to Review and Adopt
17
Regional Training and Research Co-operative Programmes, Puerto
Morelos, 24-27 June 1985
19. NOAA/AOML Oil Pollution Monitoring Seminar, Miami, 5-9
23
August 1985
20.
ECLAC Expert Meeting on Environment and Tourism in Caribbean
Development, Port of Spain, 2-4 December 1985
Report:WP/ETCD/G.180 49
21.
CARIPOL Symposium on Research and Monitoring of Petroleum
39
Pollution in the Caribbean Sea and Adjacent Regions, La Parguera,
Puerto Rico, 2-6 December 1985
22. Third Meeting of the Technical Advisory Committee of the
Caribbean Environmental Health Institute Project, Castries, St.
Lucia, 29-30 January 1986
Report: CARICOM Rep. 86/3/9 TAC/CEHI
14
23.
Ninth Session of Caribbean Development and Co-operation
Committee of Economic Commission for Latin America and the
Caribbean, Port of Spain, 29 May-3 June 1986
Report: CDCC/9/INF.1
24. Symposium on the Ecological Management of Coastal Zones, 16th
Congress of the International Association of Ecology, Syracuse, 11-
16 August 1986
25. Coastal Zone and Management in Lesser Antilles, First Annual
Technical Review Workshop, Jamaica, 16-20 June 1986
26. UNEP First Inter-oceanic Workshop on Sustainable Development
and Environmental Management in Small Islands, St. John's, 22-27
June 1986
27. Caribbean Seminar on Industry, Environment and Development in
the Caribbean, Barbados, 28 July - 1 August 1986
28.
Workshop on Analysis of Petroleum Hydrocarbons in Sediments and
21
Biota, Puerto Morelos, 9-23 November 1986
29. Workshop of Sea Disposal of Waste in the Wider Caribbean Area,
Mexico City, 26 November 1986
30. Consultation Meeting of Members of the Greater Caribbean Task
5
Team on the State of Marine Pollution (Health of the Oceans),
Kingston, 27-29 July 1987
31. First Meeting of IOC/UNEP's Task Team on the Implications of
Climatic Changes in the Wider Caribbean Region, Kingston, 30 July
- 1 August 1987 9
- 61 -
32. UNEP Drafting Group Meeting on the Development of a Network
for Exchange and Transfer of Environmental Information in the
7
Wider Caribbean, Kingston, 15-17 September 1987
33.
IMO/UNEP/IOC/Government of Mexico Seminar on the Control of
Waste Disposal at Sea, Tlatelolco, 28 September - 1 October 1987
34. Second Meeting of IOC/UNEP's Task Team on the Implications of
14
Climatic Changes in the Wider Caribbean, Miami, 2-4 March 1988.
35. Meeting of Experts on the Caribbean Environment Programme,
69
Mexico City, 7-9 September 1988.
36. Meeting of Experts for the Development of a Protocol Concerning
43
Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife in the Wider Caribbean, St.
Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, 24-26 October 1988
- 62 -
ANNEX IV
COUNTRY PARTICIPANTS AND/OR TRAINEES IN
WORKSHOPS, MEETINGS OR SEMINARS OF THE ACTION
PLAN FOR THE CARIBBEAN ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME
IDOE International Workshop on Marine Geology and Geophysics of the Caribbean Region and
its Resources, Kingston, Jamaica, 17-22 February 1975.
Ball Mahlon M. (USA)
A. Bellizzia (Venezuela)
O.H. Bohnenberger (Guatemala)
M.H.P. Bott (England)
A.H. Bouma (USA)
L.B. Brown (USA)
W.R. Bryant (USA)
J.F. Case (USA)
R.M. Castillo (Costa Rica)
R. Cruz-Orozco (Mexico)
E. Davin (USA)
L. del Castillo (Mexico)
G. Dengo (Guatemala)
H. Duque C. (Colombia)
K.O. Emery (USA)
J. Ewing (USA)
P. Fox (USA)
J.A. Galavis (Venezuela)
M.G. Georges (Haiti)
G. Giermann (France)
J. Godoy (Guatemala)
A.R. Green (USA)
P. Grim (USA)
J.C. Guerrero (Mexico)
W.W. Hay (USA)
T. van't Hof (Netherlands Antilles)
T.L. Holcombe (USA)
W.T. Horsfield (Netherlands)
R. Llinas (Dominican Republic)
R.A. Lopez (Colombia)
H.J. Mc.Gillavry (Netherlands)
B. Malfait (USA)
F. Maurrasse (USA)
A.A. Meyerhoff (USA)
G. Recchi (Panama)
Sir E. Richardson (Jamaica)
- 63 -
E. Robinson (Jamaica)
M.O. Rodriguez (Nicaragua)
R. Romero (Colombia)
Ing. O.D. Salazar (Guatemala)
J. Sanchez (Colombia)
R.M. Wright (Jamaica)
J. Scott (Trinidad & Tobago)
E.A. Silver (USA)
S. Snelson (USA)
C.I. Tavares (Dominican Republic)
J. Tomblin (Trinidad & Tobago)
J. Watkins (USA)
J.D. Weaver (Puerto Rico)
H. Wories (USA)
IOC/FAO/UNEP Workshop on Marine Pollution in the Caribbean and Adjacent Regions,
Port of Spain, Trinidad, 13-18 December, 1976
S.M. Branco (Brasil)
A. Maglioca (Brasil)
W.G. Miller (Belize)
J. Corredor (Colombia)
J. Escobar R. (Colombia)
H. Santa Cruz (Colombia)
R. Mendoza (Costa Rica)
M. Murillo (Costa Rica)
A. Archer (Barbados)
G. Suarez Alvarez (Cuba)
A. Areces Mallea (Cuba)
I.B.de Calventi (Dom. Republic)
L. Garcia (Guatemala)
R. Santigo M. (Guatemala)
B. Wade (Jamaica)
A. Vazquez Botello (Mexico)
V. Arenas Fuentes (Mexico)
Q. Richardson (Nether. Antilles)
A. Flores A. (Nicaragua)
B. Kwiecinsky (Panama)
C. Arellano L. (Panama)
I. Goodbody (Jamaica)
G. Cintron (Puerto Rico)
M. Hernandez (Puerto Rico)
R. Steer R. (Colombia)
C. Dean (Trinidad)
P. Parker (USA)
W.M. Sackett (USA)
- 64 -
R. Presley (USA)
P.A. Butler (USA)
T. Okuda (Venezuela)
J.A. Monente (Venezuela)
H. Perez Nieto (Venezuela)
A.L. Flowers Jr. (Bahamas)
Invited Lecturers:
D.K. Atwood (USA)
A. Vázquez Botello (Mexico)
E. Mandelli (Mexico)
E.F. Corcoran (USA)
G. Kullenberg (Denmark)
J. Farrington (USA)
L. Ballah (Trinidad)
I. Emilsson (Mexico)
E. Mood (USA)
International Workshop on the Prevention, Abatement and Combating of Pollution from
Ships in the Caribbean (Training Programme), Cartagena, Colombia, October 23-27, 1978.
G. Aguirre (Colombia)
R. Alvarado R. (Colombia)
R. Alvarez L. (Colombia)
G. Angel M. (Colombia)
H. Arengo B. (Colombia)
D.N. Bernard (Panama)
G. Borda T. (Colombia)
P.L. Brady (Jamaica)
D.D. Cable (Saint Kitts)
J.de D. Calle (Guatemala)
Calm. H. Camacho L. (Colombia)
F. Campbell H. (Nicaragua)
J. Chambers (Dominica)
G.E. Creque (British Virgin Islands)
De Boisfleury (Ì Martinique)
G.A. Diaz (Colombia)
B. Escartin H. (Panama)
J.J. Escobar (Colombia)
J. Fonseca T. (Colombia)
R. Garcia B. (Colombia)
P.A. Gelabert (Puerto Rico)
J.F. George (Colombia)
L.T. Giulini (Venezuela)
A.M. Hann (USA)
- 65 -
R.W. Hann (USA)
O. Howes (Montserrat, W.I.)
M. Lieuw A Paw (Suriname)
J.E. McLean Jr. (USA)
O. Mora (Colombia)
J.H. Orozco (Mexico)
F. Puga A. (Panama)
L. Rice (USA)
G. Salazar (Colombia)
E.K. Strachan (Bahamas)
H. Sylvain (Haiti)
K.L. Williams (Bahamas)
H.N. Young (USA)
J.M.N. Zikusoka (Barbados)
Caribbean Disaster Preparedness Seminar, St. Lucia, W.I., June 10-20, 1979.
R.St.A. Archer (Cayman Islands)
M. Arthur (St. Lucia)
H. Wycliffe-Morton (St. Kitts)
C.E. Been (Turks and Caicos)
P. Bergeon (France)
J. Blake (Jamaica)
A.T. Bobadilla (Dominican Republic)
Dr. A.I. Boyd (Antigua)
M. Borel (Trinidad and Tobago)
Sir C. Burton (Barbados)
G. Cabey (Montserrat)
Agr. M. Cantave (Haiti)
G. Charles (St. Lucia)
Dr. W. Chin (Guyana)
L.M. Clark (Bermuda)
H. Cyril (St. Lucia)
C. Dawson (British Virgin Islands)
D. Delance (Turks and Caicos)
D. Devaux (St. Lucia)
C. Facey (Jamaica)
M. Feuillard (Guadeloupe)
A. Forde (St. Lucia)
R. Francis (Grenada)
A. Gajadher (St. Lucia)
T. Gibbs (Barbados)
R. Gonzalez M. (Dom. Republic)
P. Gustave (St. Lucia)
Dr. L. Harney (Barbados)
O. Hector (St. Kitts)
Eng. L. Jadotte (Haiti)
- 66 -
S. James (St. Lucia)
T. James (St. Lucia)
Eng. G. Jospitre (Haiti)
K. Leslie (Belize)
Dr. G. Louisy (St. Lucia)
C.L. Lubin (St. Lucia)
H. Martindale (St. Vincent)
Dr. J.R. Menchaca (Cuba)
F.J. McDonald (Jamaica)
F. McFarlane (St. Lucia)
J. McMaster (Bermuda)
A. B.E.M. Myers (St. Lucia)
Dr. J.A.S. Nicolau (Portugal)
K.H. Nixon (Cayman Islands)
Eng. C.S. Oliveira (Portugal)
C.K.V. Outram (Barbados)
Dr. Oviedo-Javier (Dominican Republic)
G. Pilgrim (Barbados)
S. Pinto (Belize)
J.P. Plormel (France)
R. Roberts (Guyana)
Dr. H. Rodriguez S. (Cuba)
T. Scott (St. Lucia)
L.E. Smith (Bahamas)
L. Smith (Grenada)
L.P. Stevens (Antigua)
D. Sutherland (St. Lucia)
T.W. Sutherland (St. Lucia)
Hon. H. Tannis (St. Vincent)
R. Thelwell (Jamaica)
L.F. Thomas (St. Lucia)
Dr. L.A.M. Victor (Portugal)
Dr. D. Westercamp (Martinique)
K.L. Williams (Bahamas)
Conference on Environmental Management and Economic Growth in the Smaller
Caribbean Islands, St. Michael, Barbados, September 17-21, 1979.
F. Andic (Puerto Rico)
A. Archbold (Barbados)
A. Archer (Barbados)
I. Bacalao (Venezuela)
C. Barrow (Barbados)
W. Beller (USA)
C. Blackman (Barbados)
T.L. Boothe (Trinidad & Tobago)
- 67 -
R. Burns (USA)
A. Cameau (Haiti)
L. Campbell (Barbados)
M. Cerame-Vivas (Puerto Rico)
E. Chacko (USA)
J. Connel (Barbados)
J. Dellimore (Barbados)
W. Demas (Barbados)
S. Free (Barbados)
P. Gelabert (Puerto Rico)
E. Gittens (Trinidad & Tobago)
T. Gordon-Somers (Guyana)
A. Harris (Trinidad & Tobago)
J. Hurtubia (Mexico)
M. Iriarte (Puerto Rico)
S. Jones-Hendrickson (U.S. Virgin Islands)
A. Lugo (USA)
N. MacLean (Barbados)
D. Marshall (Barbados)
A. Maynard (Barbados)
W. Millanger (Barbados)
B. Miller (Barbados)
K. Miller (USA)
W. Moody (USA)
S. Moss (Barbados)
V. Munson (Barbados)
R. Noel (Guyana)
R. Otto (USA)
I. Peroxo (Venezuela)
A. Putney (U.S. Virgin Islands)
D. Riven (Barbados)
S. Shelton (USA)
J. Sheppard (Barbados)
K. Snaggs (Trinidad & Tobago)
C. Sorhaindo (Barbados)
M. St. Rose (Barbados)
E. Towle (U.S. Virgin Islands)
J. Towle (U.S. Virgin Islands)
W. Whittingham (Trinidad & Tobago)
O.K. Yhap (Barbados)
- 68 -
Meeting of the Smaller Caribbean Islands on Oil Spill Contingency Planning, San Juan,
Puerto Rico, 16-20 June 1980.
G.L. Archer (Bahamas)
R.G.B. Beswick (Cayman Islands)
J.A. Bonnet (Puerto Rico)
D. Brin (U.S. Virgin Islands)
Dr. M. Cerame-Vivas (Puerto Rico)
F. Charollais (French Antilles)
S. Clarke (Barbados)
L. Coalbrooke (Turks & Caicos)
R. Creque (British Virgin Islands)
R. Cruz-Perez (Puerto Rico)
M.C. Doctrove (Dominica)
C.J.A. Elassaiss (Neth. Antilles)
G.A. Engelbrecht (Neth. Antilles)
J.R.A Fletcher (Grenada)
P. Foye (Barbados)
P.A. Gelabert (Puerto Rico)
O. Howes (Montserrat)
Dr. W. Hughes (Bermuda)
Dr. B. Jimenez (Puerto Rico)
N. Jimenez (Puerto Rico)
K. John (St. Vincent & Grenadines)
B.D. Lauer (Cayman Islands)
Dr. A. Lugo (Puerto Rico)
O. Mueiz (Puerto Rico)
E. Ortiz (Puerto Rico)
J. Ortiz-Torres (Puerto Rico)
M.P.M.J. Piotet (French Antilles)
C. Ramos (Puerto Rico)
Cap. J.L. Royer (French Antilles)
R. Ruiz (Puerto Rico)
D. St. Aimee (St. Lucia)
W. Wernicke (U.S. Virgin Islands)
S. Williams (St. Kitts-Nevis, Anguilla)
Meeting of Caribbean Islands on Oil Spill Contingency Planning, Bridgetown, Barbados,
24-28 November 1980.
S.M. Christian (Antigua & Barbuda)
L.P. Stevens (Antigua & Barbuda)
A. B. Archer (Barbados)
P.C. Foye (Barbados)
K.A. Hall (Barbados)
R.E. Hastings (Barbados)
- 69 -
C.E. Jordan (Barbados)
Capt.H.L. Van Sluytman (Barbados)
Capt. P. Tomlin (Barbados)
Capt. A.A. Spain-Gower (Barbados)
F.J. George (Colombia)
S. Fresquet B. (Cuba)
J.C. Chambers (Dominica)
G.G. Castellanos (Dom. Republic)
F.J. Nodinot (France)
F. Charollais (France)
Capt. J.L. Royer (France)
R. Cassagnol (Haiti)
Cpt. M. LeRoy R. (Jamaica)
L.L. Francis (Jamaica)
T.E. Aldridge (Jamaica)
F.C. Ramirez (Mexico)
Lic. L. Del Valle R. (Mexico)
O.O.H. Howes (Montserrat)
C.J.A. Elassaiss (Neth. Antilles)
L.R. Enriquez (Neth. Antilles)
G.A. Engelbrecht (Neth. Antilles)
P.A. Gelabert (Puerto Rico)
W.A. Warner (St. Kitts-Nevis/Anguilla)
C.S. Flemming (St. Lucia)
K.E. John (St. Vincent & Grenadines)
Lt.C.A.Roach (Trinidad & Tobago)
H.C. Hinds (Trinidad & Tobago)
R.J. Halstead (Turks & Caicos)
Capt. C.R. Corbett (USA)
M.E. McLeod (USA)
T.R. Scully (USA)
D.C. Francois (U.S. Virgin Islands)
L.T. Giulini (Venezuela)
Capt. G. Gonzalez (Venezuela)
Workshop on Pollution Management of Caribbean Bays, Havana, Cuba, 16-28 September,
1983.
M. Alepuz Ll. (Cuba)
L.A. Cabañas O. (Cuba)
Dra. R.C. Cañas P. (Cuba)
A. Diaz A. (Cuba)
G. Garcia (Cuba)
R. Gonzalez C. (Cuba)
L. Guntin del Rio (Cuba)
N.J. Casanova (Cuba)
- 70 -
R. Lopez S. (Cuba)
G. Oliva (Cuba)
R.S. Olivier (Cuba)
D.S. Quiñones M. (Cuba)
M. Rodriguez (Cuba)
D.M. Salabria (Cuba)
G. Suarez A. (Cuba)
A. Villasol N. (Cuba)
N. Ablanedo A. (Cuba)
R. Acosta M. (Cuba)
A. Areces M. (Cuba)
M. Armengol A. (Cuba)
J. Blanco H. (Cuba)
L.R. Diaz C. (Cuba)
M.A. Espinosa G. (Cuba)
J.M. Garcia F. (Cuba)
R. Garcia G. (Cuba)
O. Gutierrez P. (Cuba)
R. Mederos B. (Cuba)
C. Mosquera L. (Cuba)
D.J. Nuñez C. (Cuba)
F.M. Palacios P. (Cuba)
E. Perigo A. (Cuba)
H. Quintana N. (Cuba)
M. Ramirez S. (Cuba)
I. Ramos R. (Cuba)
L. Shabalina (Cuba)
A.I. Tur Perez-Castañeda (Cuba)
J. Albaiges R. (Spain)
J.R. Carvajal Z. (Nicaragua)
G. Cintron M. (Puerto Rico)
A. Escofet (Mexico)
B. Kwiecinski (Panama)
A. Maldonado L. (Spain)
R. Pares F. (Spain)
A.T. Ocampo (Mexico)
A. Vasquez B. (Mexico)
M. Viñas A. (Cuba)
- 71 -
IMO/OAS/UNEP Sub-Regional Oil Spill Workshop for Central America, Mexico and
Panama, Panama City, 24-29 October 1983
M. Benitez A. (El Salvador)
R.M. Bramwell (Panama)
Cap. A. Cano S. (Mexico)
P. Carrillo (Belize)
J.R. Carvajal Z. (Nicaragua)
O. Castellanos M. (Guatemala)
I. Ceballos G. (Panama)
J.H. Diaz (Panama)
R. Elorriaga (Panama)
D. Funes G. (Honduras)
J.C. Garrido G. (Panama)
Cap. A. Girón A. (Guatemala)
C. Gonzalez A. (Panama)
Cap. R. Hernandez S. (Mexico)
J.A. Lopez Vargas (Panama)
E. Luque (Panama)
A. Mahler (Belize)
G. Marquez (Panama)
R. Mesen Vega (Costa Rica)
M.E. Miranda B. (Nicaragua)
C. Moncayo (Panama)
G. Moss (Panama)
F. Othon (Panama)
P. Palacios S. (Guatemala)
B. Patiño (Panama)
A. Rentería (Panama)
G.A. Sanchez (Honduras)
R. Sanchez (Panama)
J. Silverstein (USA)
H.A. Vaca P. (Panama)
L.C. Vega (Panama)
T.O. Vergara H. (El Salvador)
L. Villalobos (Costa Rica)
C. Von Chong (Panama)
Caribbean Environmental Education Training, St. Lucia/Dominica/Guadeloupe/St.Croix
and home countries, May-December 1984.
D. Looby (Antigua & Barbuda)
N. Hodge (Anguilla)
A. Gollop (Barbados)
R. Jules (Barbados)
T. Adams (Barbados)
D. Kirton (Barbados)
- 72 -
L.L. Perriot (Belize)
E. Gillett (Belize)
K. Thomas (Cayman Islands)
M.J. Edwards (Dominica)
C. Jijón (Ecuador)
L. St. Bernard (Grenada)
G. Philip (Grenada)
U. Hetsberger (Guyana)
C. Parks (Guyana)
W. Gager (Jamaica)
G.A. Howe (Montserrat)
I. Joseph (St. Kitts-Nevis)
P. Wiltshire (St. Kitts-Nevis)
A. Mathurin (St. Lucia)
C. d'Auvergne (St. Lucia)
M. Cros (St. Lucia)
IMO/OAS/UNEP Government Experts Meeting on Sub-Regional Oil Spill Contingency
Planning for Islands States and Territories of the Wider Caribbean, St. Lucia, 7-11 May
1984.
G. W. Benjamin (Antigua & Barbuda)
L.H. Flowers (Bahamas)
W.L.E. Conliffe (Barbados)
M. Allen (Br. Virgin Islands)
Cap. B. Sallah (Br. Virgin Islands)
P.C. Foye (Cayman Islands)
E.P. Armenteros L. (Cuba)
E. Reyna A. (Dominican Republic)
J.P. Fletcher (Grenada)
J. Thebaud (Haiti)
Lt.Cmdr. M. LeRoy R. (Jamaica)
Sgt. G.N. Fough (St. Kitts-Nevis)
C. Lubin (St. Lucia)
M. Williams (St. Lucia)
A. Dolcy (St. Lucia)
J.V. Augustin (St. Lucia)
S. James (St. Lucia)
S.M. Johnny (St. Lucia)
C.M. John (St. Vincent & Grenadines)
H.C. Hinds (Trinidad & Tobago)
R. Callender (Trinidad & Tobago)
M. Hanchell (Turks & Caicos)
Cdr. R.T. Rufe (USA)
S.A. Hajost (USA)
- 73 -
Lt.Cdr. T.W. Josiah (USA)
UNEP/CAP Workshop for Media Personnel, Barbados, 6-8 June 1984
P. Bishop (Trinidad & Tobago)
J. Clarke (Barbados)
M. Cros (St. Lucia)
M.J. Edwards (Dominica)
W. Gager (Jamaica)
A. Gollop (Barbados)
O. Hetsberger (Guyana)
N. Hodge (Anguilla)
I. Joseph (St. Kitts-Nevis)
R. Jules (Barbados)
D. Looby (Antigua & Barbuda)
S. Osborne (Montserrat)
C. ParkÚ s (Guyana)
G. Philip (Grenada)
K. Thomas (Cayman Islands)
P. Wiltshire (Cayman Islands)
V Symposium on the Investigation and Control of Marine Pollution and II Workshop on
Environmental Education of Bays in the Caribbean, Havana, Cuba, 11-14 December 1984.
G. Garcia F. (Cuba)
S. Fernandez R. (Cuba)
V. Antuña T. (Cuba)
T. W. Saenz (Cuba)
M. Alepuz Ll. (Cuba)
H. Ferrer G. (Cuba)
J. Kourí F. (Cuba)
O. Pascual F. (Cuba)
G. Oliva G. (Cuba)
G. Garcia M. (Cuba)
A. Diaz A. (Cuba)
G. Rey R. (Cuba)
R. Valdés A. (Cuba)
V. Echemendía F. (Cuba)
H. Moreno J. (Cuba)
A. Alvarez R. (Cuba)
N. Jaime C. (Cuba)
A. Villasol N. (Cuba)
A. Mata J. (Costa Rica)
F. Paez O. (Mexico)
J. A. Gomez (Panama)
M.E. Blank de Garcia (Venezuela)
- 74 -
D. Moore G. (Venezuela)
I.M. Moroto J. (Costa Rica)
V. Alvarez (Dominican Republic)
R. Vazquez M. (Panama)
C. Mosquera L. (Cuba)
R. Acosta M. (Cuba)
D. Salabarría F. (Cuba)
E. Perigó A. (Cuba)
M. Armengol A. (Cuba)
A. Areces M. (Cuba)
R. Garcia G. (Cuba)
J.M. Garcia F. (Cuba)
M. Viñas C. (Cuba)
D.J. Nuñez C. (Cuba)
L. Cabañas O. (Cuba)
I. Ramos R. (Cuba)
Meeting of Marine Research Institutions to Review and Adopt Regional Training and
Research Co-operative Programmes, Puerto Morelos, Quintana Roo, Mexico 24-27 June,
1985
V. Alvarez V.H. (Dominican Republic)
V.H. Camacho (Costa Rica)
G. Cedeño (Venezuela)
J. Claassen (Neth. Antilles)
J.E. Corredor (Puerto Rico)
A. Haynes (Jamaica)
M. Hernández A. (Puerto Rico)
W. Hunte (Barbados)
N.M.J. Casanova (Cuba)
A. King (Trinidad & Tobago)
P. Macdonel Martínez (México)
V.A. Martínez Vega (Panamá)
G. Mathison (Barbados)
A. Robertson (USA)
S. Snedaker (USA)
R. Steer-Ruiz (Colombia)
A. Vázquez-Botello (México)
- 75 -
Wider Caribbean Expert Meeting on Tourism and Environment in Caribbean
Development, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, 2-4 December 1985.
R. Andrews (Trinidad & Tobago)
C. Belmar (Trinidad & Tobago)
B. Browne (St. Vincent & Grenadines)
P. Bruchet (France)
R. Chavenni P. (Costa Rica)
J.C. Delpace (Guatemala)
O. De Freitas (Panama)
C. Dillon (Trinidad & Tobago)
M.A. Febres O. (Venezuela)
S. Gardiner (Bahamas)
F. Gregoire (Dominica)
S.M. Herrera (Neth. Antilles)
M. Hinkson (Trinidad & Tobago)
D. Hudson (Trinidad & Tobago)
M. Insan A. (Guyana)
W. Ironside (Trinidad & Tobago)
W. G. Liburd (St. Kitts-Nevis)
G. Manwaring (Trinidad & Tobago)
C. Miller (Barbados)
E. A. O'Neal (British Virgin Is.)
S. Osborne (Montserrat)
T. Peters (Antigua & Barbuda)
K. Picou (Trinidad & Tobago)
A. Pierre (á Trinidad & Tobago)
J. Pobicki (U.S. Virgin Islands)
M. Salvador (Trinidad & Tobago)
J. Shaw (Belize)
F. Srenade N. (Trinidad & Tobago)
J. Vega (Mexico)
N. Verpile (Haiti)
G.A. Vincent (Grenada)
F. Watkins (Honduras)
M. Williams (St. Lucia)
CARIPOL Symposium on the Review of Petroleum Hydrocarbons in the Caribbean
(IOC/UNEP/University of Puerto Rico), La Parguera, Puerto Rico, 1-6 December 1985.
J.A. Acuña (Costa Rica)
D.K. Atwood (USA)
S. Braithwaite (Grenada)
F.J. Burton (Cayman Islands)
G. Cedeño (Venezuela)
L. Celis G. (Mexico)
- 76 -
J. Claassen (Netherlands Antilles)
J.E. Corredor (Puerto Rico)
J.M. Cortes-Vazquez (Mexico)
R. Dawson (USA)
G.C. Ebanks (Cayman Islands)
J.A. Garay T. (Colombia)
G. Harvey (USA)
J. Horrocks (Barbados)
R. Lankford (Puerto Rico)
N. Lawrence (St. Lucia)
S. Loewenthal (USA)
G. de Mahieu (Venezuela)
M.A. Maldonado (Puerto Rico)
M. Martinez (Cuba)
A. Mata-Jimenez (Costa Rica)
R. Mederos (Cuba)
L. Millar (Guyana)
G. Mille (France)
D. Moore (Venezuela)
J. Morell (Puerto Rico)
E.R. Morris (Puerto Rico)
E. Newton (Netherlands Antilles)
E. Otero (Puerto Rico)
A. Pion (Colombia)
M. Provan-Watson (Jamaica)
Q.B. Richardson (Neth. Antilles)
G. Case R. (USA)
R. Steer R. (Colombia)
A. Vázquez-Botello (Mexico)
E.S. Van Vleet (USA)
B. Wade (Jamaica)
IOC/UNEP/UNAM Training Course on Petroleum Hydrocarbons, Puerto Morelos,
Mexico, 9-23 November 1986.
G. Gold B. (Mexico)
J. Rendon V. (Mexico)
J.A. Acuña (Costa Rica)
B. Chial (Panama)
J.M. Beltran G. (Cuba)
R. Jacinto A. (Neth. Antilles)
J. Horrocks (Barbados)
C. Rondon-Jeffrey (Trinidad/Tob.)
M.A. Palacios M. (Colombia)
A.M. Hudson (Jamaica)
- 77 -
J. Singh (Trinidad & Tobago)
J.A. Garay T. (Colombia)
G. Cedeño (Venezuela)
O.M. Rodriguez B. (Costa Rica)
L. Celis G. (Mexico)
J. Morell R. (Puerto Rico)
M. Martinez C. (Cuba)
CARIPOL I Techniques Training Course-CEHI, St. Lucia, 6-9 October 1987
T. Howe (Montserrat)
D. Paul (St. Kitts)
S. Joseph (St. Vincent)
A. Scotland (Dominica)
R. Thomas (Grenada)
W. Robinson (Turks & Caicos)
B. Laljit (British Virgin Islands)
J.M. Morell (Puerto Rico)
Consultation Meeting of Members of the Greater Caribbean Task Team on the State of
Marine Pollution (Health of the Oceans), Kingston, 27-29 July 1987
J.M. López (Puerto Rico)
C. Goenaga (Puerto Rico)
M. Alvarez (Puerto Rico)
G. de Mahieu (Venezuela)
R. Mederos (Cuba)
First Meeting of IOC/UNEP's Task Team on the Implications of Climatic Changes in the
Wider Caribbean, Kingston, 30 July - 1 August 1987
K. Aiken (Jamaica)
A. Alm (Colombia)
A. Gallegos G. (Mexico)
G. Giese (U.S.A.)
C. Gray (Jamaica)
M. Hendry (Jamaica)
J.M. López (Puerto Rico)
G. Maul (U.S.A.)
N. Singh â (St. Lucia)
- 78 -
UNEP Drafting Group Meeting on the Development of a Network for Exchange and
Transfer of Environmental Information in the Wider Caribbean (CAPNET), Kingston, 15-
17 September 1987
A. Chambers (Trinidad & Tobago)
J. Coiner (U.S.A.)
G. Greene (Jamaica)
S. Lampart (Jamaica)
S. Laurent (Trinidad & Tobago)
C. Marrett (Jamaica)
R. Thelwell (Jamaica)
Second Meeting of IOC/UNEP's Task Team on the Implications of Climatic Changes in the
Wider Caribbean, Miami, 2-4 March 1988.
R. Aparicio C. (Venezuela)
J. Broadus (U.S.A.)
D.P. De Sylva (U.S.A.)
J. Evans (U.S.A.)
G. Giese (U.S.A.)
C. Gray (Jamaica)
K. Hanson (U.S.A.)
M. Hendry (Jamaica)
G. Maul (U.S.A.)
A. Mercado (Puerto Rico)
L. Shapiro (U.S.A.)
V.P. Vincente (Puerto Rico)
M. White (Jamaica)
J. Whiteheadä (Barbados)
Meeting of Experts on the Caribbean Environment Programme, Mexico City, 7-9
September 1988
G. A. Engelbrecht (Aruba)
M. Griffith (Barbados)
C. Padmore (Barbados)
L. Smith (British Virgin Islands)
G. Garcia Durán (Colombia)
M. Astrálaga (Colombia)
J. B. Lugari (Costa Rica)
F. Paredes (Costa Rica)
H. Ferrer Gracia (Cuba)
M. Barquet Farah (Cuba)
F. Gregoire (Dominica)
P. Maugain (France)
- 79 -
J. E. Portecop (France)
M. Pilon de Pacheco (Guatemala)
W. Chin (Guyana)
J. Pompilus (Haiti)
P. David (Haiti)
M. Anderson (Jamaica)
L. Gardner (Jamaica)
S. Reyes Luján (Mexico)
J. F. Bueno Zirion (Mexico)
H. Perez Eugenio (Mexico)
J. López Medina (Nicaragua
J. E. Illueca Bonett (Panama)
C. Lubin (St. Lucia)
L. Handfield (Turks and Caicos)
R. Robinson (Turks and Caicos)
P. Gelabert (U.S.A.)
A. Paterson (U. S.A.)
N. Andrade Colmenares (Venezuela)
H. Perez Nieto (Venezuela)
N. Singh (CEHI, St. Lucia)
E. Moore (U.W.I., Barbados)
M. Alepuz (Cuba)
M. Brossard (France)
A. de Levis Mirepoix (France)
F. Alba Reyes (Mexico)
R. Govela Autrey (Mexico)
A. L. Valdes (Mexico)
E. Perez Velasquez (Nicaragua)
M. L. Dalton (United Kingdom)
W. L. Kruczynski (U.S.A.)
D. Lipka (U.S.A.)
S. A. Chacin Sanchez (Venezuela)
I. de Odreman (Venezuela)
M. Prado Briceño (Venezuela)
C. Velásquez de Visbal (Venezuela)
J. Enoch (UNLOS, Jamaica)
S. Clarke (UNESCO, Jamaica)
A. Vázquez-Botello (IOC, Jamaica)
G. R. McEachin (IMO, Puerto Rico)
H. Weitzenfeld (PAHO/WHO, Mexico)
A. P. Castillo (IDB, U.S.A.)
A. Pereira da Silva (IDB, U.S.A.)
R. Costales (IDB, U.S.A.)
W. Lawrence (CDB, Barbados)
J. Fonseca (CPPS, Colombia)
J. Escobar (CPPS, Colombia)
- 80 -
G. A. Maul (AOMæ L/NOAA, U.S.A.)
H. Hume (ICOD, Canada)
J. M. López (UPR, Puerto Rico)
C. Bohorquez (AWAWANA, Colombia)
A. Toledo Ocampo (CECODES, Colombia)
G. Maihold (FFE, Mexico)
L. Davidson (Greenpeace, U.S.A.)
B. Hagerhall (Greenpeace, U.K.)
Ronald Nigh (Greenpeace, Mexico)
F. J. Palacio (Greenpeace, Costa Rica)
M. Kaufmann (WIDECAST, U.S.A.)
Meeting of Experts for the Development of a Protocol Concerning Specially Protected
Areas and Wildlife in the Wider Caribbean Region, St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, 24-26
October 1988
J. Fuller (Antigua and Barbuda)
D. Freestone (Antigua and Barbuda)
F. Duque Tobon (Colombia)
A. Megret (France)
P. Robinson (Jamaica)
N. Winklaar (Netherlands Antilles)
J. Sybesma (Netherlands Antilles)
R. H. Alvarado Quiros (Panama)
D. Robles (Panama)
R. Bickram (Trinidad & Tobago)
M. Dalton (United Kingdom)
R. Robinson (Turks and Caicos)
W. B. Lockwood Jr. (U.S.A.)
R. Baker (U.S.A.)
D. Bodansky (U.S.A.)
N. Foster (U.S.A.)
P. A. Gelabert (U.S.A.)
A. Palmer (U.S.A.)
H. Raffaele (U.S.A.)
L. Ragster (U.S.A.)
C. Rogers (U.S.A.)
A. D. Smith (U.S.A.)
J. Uravitch (U.S.A.)
J. L. Vivaldi, (U.S.A.)
F. A. Hernández Arocha (Venezuela)
I. de Odreman (Venezuela)
M. Prado Briceño (Venezuela)
G. R. McEachin (IMO, Puerto Rico)
D. A. Simmons (CCA, Barbados)
M. Wecker (COL, U.S.A.)
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L. Davidson (Greenpeace, U.S.A.)
B. Hagerhall (Greenpeace, U.K.)
T. R. Garrett (Greenpeace, U.S.A.)
A. Putney (IUCN, U.S. Virgin Islands)
E. Towle (I.S.F., U.S. Virgin Islands) J.
Dobbin
(U.S.A.)
M. Kaufmann (WIDECAST, U.S.A.)
K. Eckert (WIDECAST, U.S.A.)
J. Sobel (U.S.A.)
T. Van't Hof (Netherlands Antilles)
C. A. Carr (U.S.A.)
J. Gibson (Belize)
T. Agardy (U.S.A.)
K. Gjerde (U.S.A.)
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ANNEX V
TECHNICAL PUBLICATIONS AND REPORTS DEVELOPED
WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OF THE CARIBBEAN
ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME
1. Aldridge, T.E. (1982) Grenada: Land Based Sources of Pollution-Waste Disposal Practices:
Solid Waste Management. CARICOM/UNEP Project of the Marine and Coastal
Environment of the Caribbean Islands (23 pages).
2. Aldridge, T.E. (1982) St. Lucia: Land Based Sources of Pollution-Waste Disposal Practices:
Solid Waste Management. CARICOM/UNEP Project of the Marine and Coastal
Environment of the Caribbean Islands (21 pages).
3. Archer, A. (1981) Antigua: Country Report. CARICOM/UNEP Project for the Protection of
the Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean Islands (28 pages).
4. Archer, A. (1982) Bahamas: Country Report. CARICOM/UNEP Project for the Protection
of the Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean Islands (61 pages).
5. Archer, A.B. (1982) St. Kitts-Nevis: Country Reê port. CARICOM/UNEP Project of the
Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean Islands (38 pages).
6. Archer, A.B. (1983) St. Vincent: Study of the Coastal Environment. CARICOM/UNEP
Project of the Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean Islands (30 pages).
7. Archer, A.B. (1984) Land Based Sources of Pollution in Coastal, Marine and Land Areas of
CARICOM States. UNEP/CARICOM/PAHO Project for the Protection of the Coastal and
Marine Environment of Caribbean Islands (64 pages).
8. Atwood, D. K. (1977) Regional oceanography as it relates to present and future pollution
problems and living resources in the Caribbean. In Collected Contributions of Invited
Lecturers and Authors to the IOC/FAO/UNEP International Workshop on Marine Pollution
in the Caribbean and Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop Report No. 11, Supplement, Paris,
UNESCO. (pp. 47-49).
9. Atwood, D.K., F.J. Burton, J.E. Corredor, G.R. Harvey, A.J. Mata-Jimenez, A.Vázquez-
Botello and B.A. Wade (1987) Results of the CARIPOL Petroleum Pollë ution Monitoring
Project in the Wider Caribbean. Mar. Poll. Bull., 18(10) (pp. 540-548).
10. Atwood, D.K., F.J. Burton, J.E. Corredor, G.R. Harvey, A.J. Mata-Jimenez, A.Vázquez-
Botello and B.A. Wade (1987) Petroleum Pollution in the Caribbean. Oceanus, 30(4) (pp.
25-32).
11. Atwood, D.K., H.H. Cummings, W.J. Nodal and R. Caballero Culbertson (1987) The
CARIPOL Petroleum Pollution Monitoring Project and the CARIPOL Petroleum Database.
Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 1-4).
12. Atwood, D.K., S. Dinkel-Mckay, G. Case Romero and E. Van Vleet. (1987) Floating Tar
and Dissolved/Dispersed Petroleum Hydrocarbons in the Northern Gulf of Mexico and the
Straits of Florida. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 73-76).
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13. Ballah, L. (1977) Political aspects of marine pollution and development of political
awareness of marine pollution problems. In Collected Contributions of Invited Lecturers
and Authors to the IOC/FAO/UNEP International Workshop on Marine Pollution in the
Caribbean and Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop Report No. 11ì , Supplement, Paris,
UNESCO. (pp. 217-235).
14. Beekhuis, J. V. (1981) Tourism in the Caribbean: Impacts on the Economic, Social, and
Natural Environments. Ambio 10:6 (pp. 325-331).
15. Beller, W.S. (ed.) (1979) Proceedings for the Caribbean Development Bank
UNEP/UNESCO/USMAB/UNDIESA Conference on Environmental Management and
Economic Growth in the Smaller Caribbean Islands, St. Michael, Barbados, 17-21
September 1979. (187 pages)
16. Burton, F.J. (1987) A Survey of Marine and Littoral Oil Pollution in the Cayman Islands,
1981-1983. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 115-122).
17. Caribbean Conservation Association (CCA) (1984) Report of the CCA/UNEP Workshop on
Environmental Education for the Caribbean Media Personnel, Barbados, 6-8 June 1984
18. Caribbean Conservation Association (CCA) (1985) The Significance of the Preservation of
the Architectural Heritage in Relation to Tourism. WP/ETCD/L.85/7.
19. Caribbean Conservation Association (CCA)/UNEP (1985) Directory of Environmental
Education Institutions, Programmes and Resource People in the Caribbean Region. UNEP
Regional Seas Directories and Bibliographies. Rome, FAO 1985. (89 pages).
20. Celis L., A. Vázquez-Botello, M. Mendelewicsz and G. Díaz (1987) Actividades del
Proyecto CARIPOL en la Zona Costera de Mexico: I. Hidrocarburos Disueltos. Carib. J.
Sci. 23(1) (pp. 11-18).
21. Corcoran, E. (1977) Pollution research and monitoring for halogenated hydrocarbons and
pesticides. In Collected Contributions of Invited Lecturers and Authors to the
IOC/FAO/UNEP International Workshop on Marine Pollution in the Caribbean and
Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop Report No. 11, Supplement, Paris, UNESCO. (pp. 159-
168).
22. ECLAC (1985) Tourism and Environment in Caribbean Development with Emphasis on the
Eastern Caribbean. WP/ETCD/L.85/1/Add.1
23. Emilsson, I. (1977) Regional oceanography as it relates to present and future pollution
problems and living resources - Gulf of Mexico. In Collected Contributions of Inviteï d
Lecturers and Authors to the IOC/FAO/UNEP International Workshop on Marine Pollution
in the Caribbean and Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop Report No. 11, Supplement, Paris,
UNESCO. (pp. 80-105).
24. FAO. (1977) Preliminary review of problems of marine pollution in the Caribbean and
adjacent regions. In Collected Contributions of Invited Lecturers and Authors to the
IOC/FAO/UNEP International Workshop on Marine Pollution in the Caribbean and
Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop Report No. 11, Supplement, Paris, UNESCO. (pp. 2-28).
25. FAO/UNEP/ECLA (1979) Overview on Natural Resources for Food and Agriculture in the
Wider Caribbean Region. E/CEPAL/PROY.3/L.INF.10 (40 pages)
26. France, R.W. (1983) Montserrat: Waste Management Survey. CARICOM/UNEP Project of
the Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean Islands (26 pages).
- 84 -
27. Gajraj, A. M. (1981) Threats to the Terrestrial Resources of the Caribbean. Ambio 10:6 (pp.
307-311).
28. Garay Tinoco, J.A. (1987) Vigilancia de la Contaminación por Petróleo en é el Caribe
Colombiano (Punta Canoas hasta Barbacoas, Cartagena, Colombia). Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp.
51-64).
29. Greene, M. P. (1981) Report on Oil Spill Contingency Planning for the Island States and
Territories of the Wider Caribbean. OAS/IMCO/UNEP/MAB (25 pages).
30. Griffith, A. and E. Williams (1985) Corals and Coral Reefs in the Caribbean. Caribbean
Conservation Association. (48 pages).
31. Gumbs, F. (1981) Agriculture in the Wider Caribbean. Ambio 10:6 (pp. 335-339).
32. Harvey, G.R. (1987) A Personal Overview of Oil in the Marine Environment. Carib. J. Sci.
23(1) (pp. 5-10).
33. IMCO (1979) The Status of Oil Pollution and Oil Pollution Control in the Wider Caribbean
Region. E.CEPAL/PROY.3/L.INF.5. (238 pages).
34. IMCO/UNEP (1978) Report on International Workshop on the Prevention, Abatement and
Combating of Pollution from Ships in the Caribbean, Cartagena, Colombia, October 23-27
1978 (42 pages).
35. IMO/OAS/UNEP (1984) Report of IMO/OAS/UNEP Government Experts Meeting on Sub-
Regional Oil Spill Contingency Planning for the Islands States and Territories of the Wider
Caribbean Region, St. Lucia, 7-11 May 1984 (25 pages).
36. IMO/UNEP/OAS (1983) Oil Spills ò and Shoreline Cleanup on the Islands of the Wider
Caribbean Region. IMO/UNEP/OAS Workshop, 31 January - February 4 1983,
Bridgetown, Barbados. (127 pages).
37. Jackson, I.L. (1985) Tourism and Environment Case Study of Fort James-Dickenson Bay,
Antigua. ECLAC, May 1985 (55 pages)
38. Jernelov, A. and O. Linden. (1981) Ixtoc: A Case Study of the World's Largest Oil Spill.
Ambio 10:6 (pp. 299-306).
39. Kullenberg, G. (1977) Pollutant transfer and transport in the sea. In Collected Contributions
of Invited Lecturers and Authors to the IOC/FAO/UNEP International Workshop on Marine
Pollution in the Caribbean and Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop Report No. 11,
Supplement, Paris, UNESCO. (pp.169-205).
40. Levine, B. (1981) Abundance and Scarcity in the Caribbean. Ambio 10:6 (pp. 274-282).
41. Lugo, A., R. Schmidt and S. Brown. (1981) Tropical Forests in the Caribbean. Ambio 10:6
(pp. 318-324).
42. Malik, N.P.S. (1982) Dominica: Recomendations on Solid Waste Management.
CARICOM/UNEP Project of the Marine and Có oastal Environment of the Caribbean
Islands (51 pages).
43. Mandelli, E. (1977) Pollution Research and Monitoring for heavy metals. In Collected
Contributions of Invited Lecturers and Authors to the IOC/FAO/UNEP International
Workshop on Marine Pollution in the Caribbean and Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop
Report No. 11, Supplement, Paris, UNESCO. (pp. 106-145).
44. Martin, J.M. and M. Meybeck. (1977) A review of river discharges in the Caribbean and
adjacent regions. In Collected Contributions of Invited Lecturers and Authors to the
- 85 -
IOC/FAO/UNEP International Workshop on Marine Pollution in the Caribbean and
Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop Report No. 11, Supplement, Paris, UNESCO. (pp. 29-
46).
45. Martinez Canals, M. and M. Martinez Benitez (1987) Distribución de Hidrocarburos
Aromáticos Polinucleares en el Litoral Norte de las Provincias de La Habana y Matanzas,
Cuba. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 85-92).
46. Mata, A.J., J. Acuña, M.M. Murillo and J. Cortés (1987) Estudio de la Contaminación por
Petróleo en la Costa Caribe de Costa Rica: 1981-1985. Carib.J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 41-50).
47. Mc Gaw, R. (1983) Trinidad and Tobago: Pollution Assessment. CARICOM/UNEP project
of the Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean Islands (50 pages).
48. Ministerio del Transporte-Republica de Cuba(MITRANS)/UNDP/UNEP/UNESCO(1985)
Investigación y Control de la Contaminación Marina en la Bahía de la Habana. Vols. I-IV.
49. Mood, E. W. (1977) Health aspects of coastal water pollution. In Collected Contributions
of Invited Lecturers and Authors to the IOC/FAO/UNEP International Workshop on Marine
Pollution in the Caribbean and Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop Report No. 11,
Supplement, Paris, UNESCO. (pp. 206-216).
50. Morell, J.M. and J.E. Corredor (1987) Further Observations on Pelagic Petroleum Pollution
off the Southwesõ t Coast of Puerto Rico. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 131-138).
51. Newton, E. (1987) Tar on Beaches, Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp.
139-144).
52. OAS/IMCO/UNEP/MAB (1980) Report of the Meeting of the Smaller Caribbean Islands on
Oil Spill Contingency Planning, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 16-20 June 1980
53. OAS/IMCO/UNEP/MAB (1981) Report on Mission to Caribbean Islands, February-March
1981
54. OAS/MAB/IMCO/USAID/UNEP/OAS (1980) Report of the Meeting of Caribbean Islands
on Oil Spill Contingency Planning, Barbados, 24-28 November 1980.
55. Otero, E., F. Nieves and J.E. Corredor (1987) Patterns of Tar Ball Accumulation on Lunate
Coral Key at La Parguera, Puerto Rico. Carib. J. Sci.23(1) (pp. 123-130).
56. Owens, E.H., J.C. Sainlos and L.T. Giulini (1985) IMO/UNEP Survey of the Status of Oil
Pollution Control in the South American Caribbean Region (88 pages) and Appendices.
57. PAHO (1985) Tourism and Health in the Caribbean. WP/ETCD/L.12.
58. PAHO/UNEP (1980) Overview on Environmö ental Health in the Wider Caribbean Region.
UNEP/CEPAL/WG.48/INF.12. (75 pages).
59. Provan, M., B.A. Wade, A. Mansingh and E.V. Roberts (1987) Origin, Nature and Effects
of Oil Pollution in Kingston Harbour, Jamaica. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) pp. 105-114).
60. Reid, R. (1981) Environment and Public Health in the Caribbean. Ambio 10:6 (pp. 312-
317).
61. Richardson, Q.B., J.A. Claassen and E.M. Gijsbertha (1987) Tar Pollution Monitoring in
Curaçao. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 145-152).
62. Rodriguez, A. (1981) Marine and Coastal Environmental Stress in the Wider Caribbean
Region. Ambio 10:6 (pp. 283-294).
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63. Romero, G.C., G.R. Harvey and D.K. Atwood (1987) Stranded Tar on Florida Beaches:
September 1979-October 1980. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 65-72).
64. Saldarriaga R., A. (1984) Estudio de Impacto Ambiental y Posibilidades de Desarrollo de
las Actividades Turísticas en el Parque Nacional Tayrona. UNEP/INDERENA, Bogotá, 31
October 1984 (32 pages).
65. Smith, D.A. (1983) St. Vincent and the Grenadines: Environmental Assessment.
CARICOM/UNEP Project for the Protection of the Marine and Coastal Environment of the
Caribbean Islands (49 pages).
66. Thorhaug, A. (1981) Biology and Management of Seagrasses in the Caribbean. Ambio 10:6
(pp. 295-298).
67. Tomblin, J. (1981) Earthquakes, Volcanoes and Hurricanes: A Review of Natural Hazards
and Vulnerability in the West Indies. Ambio 10:6 (pp. 340-345).
68. UN/DIESA (1979) Marine and Coastal Area Development in the Wider Caribbean Region:
An Overview. New York. E/CEPAL/PROY.3/L.INF.13. (65 pages).
69. UNDP/UNESCO/UNEP (1983) Final Report on the IV Symposium and Workshop on
Management of Caribbean Bays, Havana, Cuba, 19-24 September 1983. (27 pages).
70. UNEP (1979) Review of International Conventions Relevant to the Environmental
Protection of the Wider Caribbean Region, E/CEPAL/PROY.3/L.INF.15. (29 paø ges).
71. UNEP (1983) Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment Programme. UNEP Regional
Seas Reports and Studies No. 26. (26 pages).
72. UNEP (1983) Convention for the Protection and Development of the Marine Environment
of the Wider Caribbean Region (including Protocol concerning Co-operation in Combating
Oil Spills in the Wider Caribbean Region). Regional Seas Conventions and Protocols. (25
pages).
73. UNEP (1987) Action Plan for the Caribbean Environment Programme - A Framework for
Sustainable Development. (24 pages).
74. UNEP (1988) Implications of Climatic Changes in the Wider Caribbean Region (Draft). A
Report by the Task Team of Experts. Meeting of Experts on the Caribbean Environment
Programme, Mexico City, 7-9 September 1988. (215 pages).
75. UNEP (1988) Report of the Meeting of Experts on the Caribbean Environment Programme,
Mexico City, 7-9 September 1988.1/6. (33 pages).
76. UNEP (1988) Report of the Meeting of Experts for the Development of a Protocol
Concerning Specially Protected Arù eas and Wildlife in the Wider Caribbean Region, St.
Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, 24-26 October 1988. (27 pages).
77. UNEP/CEPAL (1982) Development and Environment in the Wider Caribbean Region: A
Synthesis. UNEP Regional Seas Reports and Studies No. 14. UNEP (41 pages).
78. UNEP/ECLA (1979) Human Settlements in the Wider Caribbean Area: An Overview.
E/CEPAL/PROY.3/L.INF.14.
79. UNEP/ECLA (1979) Natural Disasters in the Wider Caribbean Area: An Overview.
E/CEPAL/PROY.3/L.INF.12. (150 pages).
80. UNEP/ECLA (1979) The State of Marine Pollution in the Wider Caribbean Region.
UNEP/CEPAL/WG.48/INF.5 (52 pages).
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81. UNEP/ECLA (1980) A Perspective of Environmental Education in the Wider Caribbean.
UNEP/CEPAL/WG.48/INF.21 (21 pages).
82. UNEP/ECLA (1981) Co-operative Projects Proposed as Part of the Caribbean Environment
Programme. Second Meeting of Government-Nominated Experts to Review the Draft
Action Plan for the Wider Caribbean Region, Managua, 23-27 February 1981. (225 pages).
83. UNEP/ECLA/IUCN (1980) A Strategy for the Conservation of Living Marine
Resources and Processes in the Caribbean Region. UNEP/CEPAL/WG.48/INF.17 (44
pages).
84. UNEP/ECLA/OAS (1980) Tourism and Environment in the Wider Caribbean Area: An
Overview. UNEP/CEPAL/WG.48/INF.20 (34 pages).
85. UNEP/ECLAC (1984) The State of Marine Pollution in the Wider Caribbean Region.
UNEP Regional Seas Reports and Studies No. 36. UNEP 1984. (42 pages).
86. UNEP/FAO (1985) Directory of Caribbean Marine Environmental Centres. 2nd edition.
UNEP Regional Seas Directories and Bibliographies. Rome, FAO. (214 pages).
87. UNEP/FAO/IMCO/IUCN (1979) Report of the Mission whichû visited Mexico, 26
August-12 September 1980, to provide assistance to the Government of Mexico in
connection with the IXTOC-I Accident. UNEP (32 pages).
88. UNEP/IOC (1980) Directory of Caribbean Marine Research Centres. UNEP Regional Seas
Directories and Bibliographies, Geneva (500 pages).
89.
USOFDA/AID (1979) Executive Summary of
UNDRO/WFC/UNIDO/ILO/UNESCO/WHO/WMO/UNEP Caribbean Disaster
Preparedness Seminar, St. Lucia, West Indies, June 1979.
91.
USOFDA/AID (1979) Proceedings, Issues and Recommendations on
UNDRO/WFC/UNIDO/ILO/UNESCO/WHO/WMO/UNEP Caribbean Disaster
Preparedeness Seminar, St. Lucia, West Indies, June 1979.
92. Van Vleet, E.S. and G.G. Pauly (1987) Characterization of Oil Residues Scraped from
Stranded Sea Turtles from the Gulf of Mexico. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 77-84).
93. Vázquez B., A. (1977) Pollution research and monitoring for hydrocarbons: present status
of the studies of petroleum contamination in the Gulf of Mexico. In Collected
Contributions of Invited Lecturers and Autü hors to the IOC/FAO/UNEP International
Workshop on Marine Pollution in the Caribbean and Adjacent Regions, IOC Workshop
Report No. 11, Supplement, Paris, UNESCO. (pp. 146-158).
94. Vázquez Cortés, J.M., A.V. Botello and S. Villanueva (1987) Actividades del Proyecto
CARIPOL en la Zona Costera de México: II. Breas y Alquitranes en Playas. Carib. J. Sci.
23(1) (pp. 19-28).
95. Vázquez-Botello, A., S. Villanueva and M. Mendelewicsz (1987) Programa de Vigilancia de
los Hidrocarburos Fósiles en Sedimentos del Golfo de México y Caribe Mexicano: 1978-
1984. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 29-39).
96. Wade, B.A., M. Provan, V. Gillett and P. Carroll (1987) Oil Pollution of Jamaican Coastal
Waters and Beaches: Results of the IOCARIBE/CARIPOL Monitoring Programme
(Jamaica), 1980-1983. Carib. J. Sci. 23(1) (pp. 93-104).
97. Waite, T.D. (1982) Barbados: Waste Survey Analysis. CARICOM/UNEP Project of the
Marine and Coastal Environment of the Caribbean Islands (37 pages).
- 88 -
98. Waite, T.D. (1982) Belize: Country Report. CARICOM/UNEP Project of the Marine and
Coastal Environment of the Caribbean Islands (26 pages).