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Nature Under Threat: How to Conserve Marine and Coastal Biodiversity

The film provides an insight into the project titled "Conservation and Sustainable Management of Coastal and Marine Protected Areas (CMPA)." The main objective of the CMPA project is to show ways and means to improve the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity along the coast. Taking into consideration the economic importance of the coastal zone for large segments of the population the project’s approach is people?centred, thus ensuring the acceptance of conservation by those directly affected. The project uses a variety of tools to achieve its objectives.

 

The three main components of the CMPA project are participatory process, human capacity development, and communication and awareness. The Project intervenes at two levels in India: National and at the level of selected federal states. The project sites for the CMPA project are as follows: 

1.        Khijadiya Bird Sanctuary, Gujarat

2.        Gosabara Wetland Complex & Madhavpur, Gujarat

3.        Thane Creek, Maharashtra

4.        Velas Dabhol Coast, Maharashtra

5.        Ansure Creek, Maharashtra

6.        Dr. Salim Ali Bird Sanctuary & Chorao Island, Goa

7.        Palk Bay, Tamil Nadu

 

The film was made under the project titled ‘Conservation and Sustainable Management of Coastal and Marine Protected Areas (CMPA)’ of the Indo-German Biodiversity Programme.  The CMPA Project is commissioned by the German Federal Ministry for Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB), under the International Climate Initiative (IKI). It is implemented by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), Government of India, and the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH on behalf of BMUB.