The United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) is an operational arm of the United Nations, supporting the successful implementation of its partners' peacebuilding, humanitarian and sustainable development projects around the world. UNOPS supports partners to build a better future by providing services that increase the efficiency, effectiveness and sustainability of their projects. Mandated as a central resource of the United Nations, UNOPS provides sustainable project management, procurement and infrastructure services to a wide range of governments, donors and United Nations organizations.
The Water and Energy Cluster (WEC)
Based in Copenhagen, the Water and Energy Cluster (WEC), which is a part of the Vienna Multi-Country Office (VIEMCO) supports global and regional environmental/sustainable development initiatives through financial and grant management, procurement, human resources and project management services.
The thematic focus of the cluster is marine and freshwater resources management, climate change adaptation, mitigation and transparency, energy and environmental conservation.
The CLME+ SAP (2015-2024) and the UNDP/GEF “CLME+ Project”
The Caribbean and North Brazil Shelf Large Marine Ecosystems (jointly further referred to as “the CLME+ region”) are shared by 26 Independent States and 18 Overseas Territories. These “LME’s” are key to many globally important ecological processes. The goods and services provided by these marine ecosystems, if duly protected/restored and used wisely and sustainably, hold great potential to contribute to region-wide climate-resilient “blue” socio-economic development and the achievement of many of the Sustainable Development Goals including but not limited to: SDG14 Life Below Water and SDG5 Gender Equality.
Fisheries and tourism (two key economic drivers), and “blue” (oceans-based) socio-economic development overall, are highly dependent on marine ecosystem health.
Countries from the region are united in their aims to achieve the former through several political integration mechanisms: e.g. the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) and the Central American Integration System (SICA), a.o. The region’s geopolitical complexity however makes socially just and effective governance & management of shared living marine resources, and the achievement of good ecosystem health, particularly challenging.
Pollution, habitat degradation and unsustainable fisheries & fishing practices have increasingly impacted marine ecosystem health in the region, with climate change holding the potential to further exacerbate negative impacts. With the need for collective action being evident, through the support of the Global Environment Facility (GEF) an ambitious region-wide 10-year Strategic Action Programme (“the CLME+ SAP”, 2015-2024) was developed in 2013. To date, this action programme has been politically endorsed by 36 Ministers, representing 26 countries and 8 overseas territories.
The “CLME+ Project” (2015-2021) has helped catalyze the implementation of this 10-year CLME+ SAP. Major emphasis has been put on facilitating enhanced, integrated “interactive governance”, with “interactive governance” being: “the whole of interactions between governments, civil society, academia and private sector, to solve societal problems and exploit societal opportunities”. With the CLME+ Project approaching its end and in order to ensure the continuation of key actions under the CLME+ SAP, the need now exists to mainstream gender equality/women & youth empowerment and social and environmental safeguard considerations into the post-project sustainability strategy. This strategy is expected to have both regional, sub-regional as well as national and local components.