Global Knowledge Sharing
An important component of the GEF Coral Reef Rescue Project is to strengthen global to local capacity for monitoring and conserving climate refuge coral reefs by facilitating knowledge sharing, access, and application. This includes connecting stakeholders to a global knowledge network, integrating the monitoring of key climate variables into management strategies, and fostering the exchange of information, experiences, and strategies through learning events that provide practical resources, tools, and training. Please find below a list of relevant resources:
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At the Coral Reef Rescue Initiatve Knowledge Hub you will find a wealth of resources to explore! The Knowledge Hub aims to support knowledge management, learning, and the development of communities of practice needed to protect coral reefs and promote sustainable development in coastal communities. The Knowledge Hub is also a space for training and networking. It is a space to share knowledge and experiences, case studies, tools, advice, and learning resources from the 7 CRRI countries and beyond. |
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GEF CRR Coral Huddle: Monitoring and evaluation are integral elements of the GEF CRR project to enable adaptive management and support learning, communication, accountability and planning throughout the implementation of project activities. The GEF CRR Coral Huddle is a portal where we (the global and national executing teams) will need to ‘huddle’ to record our progress against work plan activities and report on the project’s results framework indicators. The GEF Coral Huddle has been developed in collaboration with Palo IT as an online M&E system to enable both a mechanism for tracking progress toward achieving the project outcomes and to enable sharing between countries and CRRI partners. |
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The Ocean Agency in partnership with Google have made some fantastic photo/video resources publically available! The Ocean Agency's 50 Reefs Initiative - Developed in collaboration with the Global Change Institute at The University of Queensland and the Wildlife Conservation Society, the Initiative received funding from Bloomberg Philanthropies, The Tiffany & Co. Foundation, and Paul G. Allen Philanthropies. The initiative aimed to pinpoint a global selection of coral reefs that had a strong likelihood of surviving climate change and could potentially aid in the recovery of nearby reefs. Collaborating with leading coral reef scientists, the study identified more reefs than initially expected. This effort has secured over $93 million in funding for the identified reefs and is utilized by the Global Fund for Coral Reefs to guide investments. |

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