The Conservation Needs Assessment (CNA) for Papua New Guinea was requested by the government of Papua
New Guinea and funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). The CNA was implemented by the Biodiversity Support Program, a USAID-funded consortium of World Wildlife Fund, World Resources Institute, and The Nature Conservancy, in collaboration with local and international non-governmental organizations (NGOs), museums, and academic institutions.
Links to you tube videos providing a walk through of key data portal steps
Shipping traffic on marine mammals
Plants diversity
A short report on CR VU EN species in PNG in 2008 on the IUCN Red list
UN Sustainable Development Goal
Lae Port Development
Water quality Information and reports
Fire and Sustainable Agricultural and Forestry Development
3rd Draft
Crocodile reclassification
MARINE BIODIVERSITY SURVEY FINAL REPORT, 2018
Environmental Monitor 2002 is designed to provide basic information about PNG's natural resources, pressures affecting these resources and steps which need to take place to ensure PNG's awareness of economic benefits and trade-offs involved between development and sustainability. It is the first in Monitor Series which aim to engage and inform stakeholders of key environmental issues.
This is an economic evaluation of the compensation to which Papua New Guinea’s customary landholders -
wrongly dispossessed through Special Agricultural Business Leases (SABL) - might be entitled if they successfully sued the government. The evaluation involves the calculation of commercial loss but also, and probably moreimport antly, economic equivalent value loss. The framework identifies the relevant heads of value (not just priced transactions) and demonstrates appropriate methods for valuation. It does not pretend to be a price calculator but rather a tool for advocacy.
Revised_work_plan_sedimentation_impacts_of_Laloki_River_and_Sirinumu_Dam
2005 Ok Tedi CMCA village survey for the Mineral Policy Institute
An introduction to the natural history, societies, conservation and sustainable development of the New Guinea region prepared by CSIRO Australia for the Moore Foundation, 2003
This pictorial review will show:
•how Earth history has given these islands immense biological and mineral riches;
•why the plants and animals are of outstanding value for science and natural history;
•the enormous diversity of human cultures developed over the last30,000 years;
•the footprints of human society and infrastructure that lie over the entire landscape;
Various collections or reports
Carettochelys insculpta Ramsay 1886 – Pig-Nosed Turtle, Fly River Turtle
COMMERCIALLY IMPORTANT SEA CUCUMBERS OF THE WORLD