Hawaii’s Innovative Plan To Manage Marine Resources Is Being Quietly Rolled Back
The fishing community raised concerns but DLNR says the initiative’s broader emphasis on place-based planning will remain in effect.
The fishing community raised concerns but DLNR says the initiative’s broader emphasis on place-based planning will remain in effect.
Top ocean resource officials under Gov. Josh Green have quietly scrapped the state鈥檚 ambitious yet vaguely defined 鈥30×30鈥 marine conservation goal.
Hawaii became a national leader in 2016 when Gov. David Ige announced the state’s commitment to effectively manage at least 30% of the islands鈥 nearshore waters by 2030, coinciding with the international target of protecting 30% of the planet in the same time frame.
But Dawn Chang, Green’s controversial pick to lead the Department of Land and Natural Resources, said in a Jan. 30 letter that the Division of Aquatic Resources has listened to the community and is “adjusting accordingly” by ditching the “30×30” slogan as the stated target.
“We have heard from numerous fishers and experienced first-hand that the ’30×30′ language adds a lot of confusion about the initiative and is counterproductive in terms of having open dialogue about issues and solutions for reaching our desired goals for nearshore waters,” she said.
The change aims to make the new safeguards being developed for Hawaii鈥檚 imperiled marine life more community-driven, Chang said.
But it remains to be seen what measurable goals would replace 30×30 in the state鈥檚 now that it鈥檚 been removed. It also remains unclear whether the change, which was not widely publicized by DLNR, reflects broader public sentiment across Hawaii beyond the state鈥檚 vocal fishing community, which pressed in recent months for the removal.
Fishers showed up en masse late last year at a trio of lively, DLNR-organized public meetings on Maui, the pilot island for Holomua. Many feared that the initiative would entirely ban fishing across 30% of the state鈥檚 waters. In reality, it would have kept those waters open to fishing but with new regulations such as gear and bag limits, according to top DAR officials.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we鈥檙e just responding to the loud voices,鈥 Chang said last week. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not abandoning any of the work that has been done to date. All of that scientific information, all of the Indigenous knowledge we鈥檝e collected 鈥 those are all part of the toolbox. We鈥檙e just using a different approach.”
The 30×30 conservation concept has been embraced in recent years by scientists, the United Nations and President Joe Biden鈥檚 administration as to help combat climate change, as well as a catchy slogan that the public could rally behind.
In Hawaii, its removal was largely due to a mix of legitimate concerns and rampant misinformation spreading online among local fishers, according to Chang and her deputies overseeing Holomua.聽They deemed the concept too divisive, so she announced the state鈥檚 departure from 30×30 in a letter last month she said went out to various parties interested in Holomua.
A local fishing advocacy group called the , or HFACT, held its own, separate meetings on Kauai, Oahu and Maui to brief fishers on 30×30 and to encourage them to attend the DLNR鈥檚 Maui meetings.
More than 700 fishers attended those HFACT 鈥減re-meetings,鈥 according to association president Phil Fernandez. The large turnout was one 鈥渟ilver lining鈥 to all the misinformation and fear swirling about, but once HFACT had fishers in the room it tried to set the record straight, he added.
Many fishers at those meetings said the 30% target didn鈥檛 make sense to them, Fernandez said. 鈥淭hey want 100% to be effectively managed. Why ignore the other 70?鈥
They also wanted to see a more 鈥渉olistic鈥 conservation approach that addresses land-based pollution sources, adds artificial reefs in some spots to help generate more fish, and places less of an emphasis on fishing restrictions, he said.
DAR Administrator Brian Neilson said the HFACT meetings caught his staff off-guard.
鈥淲e had only planned for these talk-story sessions in Maui,鈥 Neilson said last week. 鈥淏ut when HFACT held these other meetings 鈥 and got everyone riled up, we weren鈥檛 prepared for that.鈥
In December, HFACT Executive Director Edwin Watamura, acting on behalf of the group鈥檚 3,000 or so participants, urged state senators during an informational briefing from the state鈥檚 plans. Watamura, a former member of the Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council, called the goals 鈥渁rbitrary.鈥
Chang said DLNR鈥檚 decision to scrap 30×30 was made internally in January. They didn’t consult privately with any outside groups ahead of time on whether to do that, she said.
Her bid to get confirmed by the Senate sometime in the near future didn鈥檛 factor into the decision either, she added.
Both Neilson and Luna Kekoa, a DAR planner working on Holomua, said they supported Chang鈥檚 decision to remove 30×30. Kekoa said Holomua鈥檚 core pillar of 鈥減lace-based planning鈥 remains in effect and that could still mean 30×30 along some parts of Hawaii鈥檚 coastline.
鈥淲e just took it out of the name,鈥 Kekoa said, so that some people don鈥檛 reflexively reject their efforts.
Critics worry the change could weaken the effort to ramp up protection of the islands鈥 marine life as more coral reefs and fish disappear.
鈥淚 think we need to leave it in there to make sure we are accountable,鈥 said Ekolu Lindsey, a Lahaina resident involved in various conservation groups on Maui.
DLNR has struggled to explain to the community what the 30×30 management would entail, he said, which helped the misinformation to spread.
鈥淲e鈥檙e still struggling with what is 鈥榚ffectively managed,鈥欌 Lindsey said. 鈥淚 think this process that they (DLNR) have is transparent, but the misinformation may kill it. A lot of the fishermen just don鈥檛 understand it, and they鈥檙e getting confused.鈥
Moving At ‘The Speed Of Trust’
Hawaii has seen a 60% loss of its coral across the islands in the past 40 years, and a 90% loss in the catch rates of some fish species, according to Ulalia Woodside, executive director for The Nature Conservancy in Hawaii.
鈥淲e know that climate change is accelerating that,鈥 she said.
Ige first announced Hawaii鈥檚 commitment to 鈥渆ffectively manage鈥 30% of its watersheds and nearshore waters by 2030 at a major environmental conference in Honolulu in 2016.
鈥淲e are a microcosm of our planet earth,鈥 Ige told several thousand attendees of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature鈥檚 World Conservation Congress gathered at the Blaisdell Center. 鈥漌e cannot afford to mess this up.鈥
Since then, the process has moved slowly. Nearly seven years after Ige鈥檚 declaration, the state considers 6% of its nearshore waters effectively managed, Kekoa said.
Neilson attributed much of that slow pace to budget cuts and the Covid-19 pandemic.
鈥滻t was kind of an unfunded mandate,鈥 he said, noting that staff can only be redirected to do so much.
He said it was important to proceed carefully so as not to lose community trust.
Meanwhile, both the U.N. and the U.S. federal government are advancing their own versions of 30×30. The U.S. effort largely relies 鈥渕arine protected areas鈥 that already exist across the Pacific Ocean, such as the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument, where virtually all fishing is prohibited.
Green said on the campaign trail in early November that as governor he 鈥渨ould continue to support the Holomua program, which seeks to effectively manage Hawaii鈥檚 nearshore waters by 2030 with significant input from interested community members.鈥
Chang, Neilson and Kekoa said the program is still working that way. Chang has stressed that her strengths lie in her ability to conduct a thorough and transparent public process including robust community engagement before making any difficult decisions.
Critics were concerned, however, that DLNR stripped 30×30 before it had even finished appointing a 鈥淣avigation Team鈥 of key Maui community members to make policy recommendations on the island鈥檚 marine management plan.
Last week, DLNR staff was slated to present on the 鈥淗olomua 30×30 Initiative鈥 during the meeting in Vancouver. But pulling the 30×30 language was never mentioned, according to Lindsey, who attended the presentation.
Lindsey said he thinks DLNR is removing it “with the best of intention,” based on hearing that the community doesn’t like the 30% part. But he said the solution could have been to just define it better.
Woodside said that it makes sense for the state to step away from 30×30 to be 鈥渓ess fixated鈥 on a particular number and to keep Hawaii鈥檚 local communities more open to the proposals under Holomua.
She added, however, that doing so still requires meaningful goals to reach biological, social and cultural targets.
The need to act urgently to address climate change in Hawaii while maintaining public trust is a challenge but it can be done, Woodside said.
鈥淢any folks have said progress moves at the speed of trust,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have examples where there hasn鈥檛 been that trust. And that means that good work 鈥 even if it was done quickly 鈥 wasn鈥檛 able to materialize or move across the finish line.鈥
Civil Beat鈥檚 coverage of climate change is supported by the Environmental Funders Group of the Hawaii Community Foundation, Marisla Fund of the Hawaii Community Foundation and the Frost Family Foundation.
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About the Author
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org