Papua New Guinea (PNG) is committed to the establishment of a network of protected areas to fulfil national and international commitments.
Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund: Ecosystem Profile East Melanesian Islands Biodiversity Hotspot
WWF PNG Ecoregions
A Basic Education For All (EFA) is critical if all citizens are to participate in a modern society. This is a
right for all children, both boys and girls, in Papua New Guinea as stated in the National Constitution. A
basic education is essential for the personal development of all people to provide them with the skills and
knowledge to improve their quality of life.
Application form that is required to be submitted to apply for an environment permit for any project within Papua New Guinea
Strengthening the capacity of decision making on REDD+
Papua New Guinea is committed to Sustainable Development through its StaRS Strategy and Vision 2050. PNG has also signed up to Rio Conventions and supplement agreements and protocols which needs monitoring and evaluation. Sustainable Development Goals are very important as it simplifies the Sustainable Development approaches.
Forestry and climate change
Assessing compensation for the wrongful loss of customary land
Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) is a conservation NGO working globallly and in PNG
Mining and oil and gas
Background information
Trans-Island Highway Construction Project in PNG
Measuring change over period 2002-2014
PAPUA NEW GUINEA 2011 NATIONAL REPORT
Papua New Guinea Resource Information System Handbook
It is the National Integrated Water Resource Management Diagnostic Report Papua New Guinea. A Draft SOPAC Miscellaneous Report 643 involving GEF, UNDP, SOPAC and UNEP. demonstration project and production of a full brief through an extensive consultative process.
The impacts of human-induced environmental change that characterize the Anthropocene are not felt equally across the globe. In the tropics, the potential for the sudden collapse of ecosystems in response to multiple interacting pressures has been of increasing concern in ecological and conservation research. The tropical ecosystems of Papua New Guinea are areas of diverse rainforest flora and fauna, inhabited by human populations that are equally diverse, both culturally and linguistically.