Oil and Gas Challenges, Constraints and Measures Adopted

6.0 Opportunities

6.1 Turtle Conservation

A program to protect sea turtle hatchlings started five years ago with one hotel in the Western region. This program has now evolved to include eight hotel owners and their neighboring communities. CRC will support the expansion of this work as a good example of public-private sector collaboration. This work has provided important research data on the four species of sea turtles that nest in the Western Region and allows for estimates of the number of nesting turtles per annum over 400 in a stretch of beach from Butre to Half Assini 150 km. In addition, the program has worked with communities to save hundreds of turtles that would have been killed and eaten and has overseen the successful hatching and sea-entry of over 10,000 turtles. The data collected by the hotels, however, remains to be compiled and analyzed. Toward this end, CRC is identifying a graduate student it will fund to conduct research that will include collecting the data and publishing the overall results. Figure 14: Tourists observing turtle at a conservation site Currently, a CRC intern from Noroeste Sustentable NOS, Aaron Rivera Bours, is coordinating and working with beachfront tourism operators to harmonize their activities. The Initiative has also involved the Wildlife Division of the Forestry Commission and the Ghana Wildlife Society in this collaborative effort at turtle conservation. Spreading word of this successful private-public sector initiative could promote the expansion of other private-public collaborations within and outside of the Western Region.

6.2 Vulnerability Assessments

This reporting period, CRC has gathered data and information from diverse sources on coastal zone vulnerability to climate change. While several institutions are collecting such information and data, there is little communication amongst them. The GIS lab established with US military support Africoms at the Oceanography Department of the University of Ghana, will be working in collaboration with CRC to bring together the various actors working in this field of coastal climate change vulnerability and adaptation in order to share data and work together on detailed vulnerability assessments for priority areas. Information from these assessments can then feed into district zoning and economic development plans. Using data available at the EPA and University of Ghana, CRC will complete detailed scenarios for the evolution of the shoreline and 42