Gili Trawangan Ecotourism and Coral Reef Restoration
Not too far away in the
East of Bali lies a sleepy island that practices
sustainable tourism.
Just
horse power to get you around on this isle.
The thousand odd people living within this
Indonesian territory of Gili Trawangan island
(near Lombok) recognise their growing economic
needs, want to grow tourism in a bigger way to
meet those needs, and yet take personal
responsibility in protecting their environment.
Over the past decade, they have seen a drop in
the number of fishes in the sea. Fishermen had
been throwing handmade bombs into the waters as
a quick way of getting seafood to feed its own
people. “Our coral reefs have been badly hit as
a result of the use of bombs in fishing and we
realized that when reefs disappeared, so did the
fish,” said Pak Malek, head of Gili Eco Trust at
the opening ceremony of the 6th Biorock Workshop
on Gili Trawangan from 1-7 December 2008.
“But this destructive fishing is not practised
anymore since we have established a marine park
area (MPA) here working with the Lombok marine
conservation office Kelesterian Laut (KSDA),”
said Delphine Robbe, manager of Gili EcoTrust.
“Our corals have also been destroyed by storms,
anchor drops, overfishing and compressor spare
gun fishing,” she said, “not to mention El Nino
in 1997-1998 that caused bleaching.”
Building
blocks of tourism development.Knowing
better now, the community has taken action.
Delphine and her colleagues in Gili Eco Trust
have introduced a slew of measures. They have
compensated fishermen for staying away from the
MPA, installed mooring buoys, and promoted
marine awareness in schools and dive shops. The
Gili Eco Trust set up in 2001 by the seven dive
shops and a local organisation gather funds and
resources to heighten marine awareness and
conservation of the three Gili islands – Gili
Trawangan, Gili Nemo and Gili Air.
A major initiative is to restore demolished
underwater habitats by building new coral reefs
using electric powered structures or Biorock
with the help of the community itself.
Community Leads, NGO Follows
Gili Trawangan is a case study of how
initiatives to make the environment a better
place can come from within, and bottom up. The
first Biorock trial installation took off on 20
November 2004 (source: www.balidiscovery.com) at
the invitation of long-time Bali resident Cody
Schwaiko, and Bali Hai Diving Adventures with
funding from the Vila Ombak Diving Academy
backed by community support.
Coral
reefs born again.Dr Thomas J
Goreau and the late Prof Wolf Hilbertz showed
them how to build a steel structure in various
shapes to create a new coral reef to bring back
the fish – and hence boost fishing livelihood –
and protect the shores from erosion. Coral reefs
serve as natural hiding places for sea creatures
from predators while helping themselves to
lesser prey. A healthy ecosystem for butterfly
fish, damsel fish, lion fish, sting rays,
lobsters and even moray eels.
“Then as nobody could believe it was cheap and
quite easy to make, my friends Laurent Lavoye,
Foued Kaddachi and I built our structure in
front of Trawangan with our own money and with
guidance from Tom Goreau during the 3rd Biorock
workshop in Pemuteran, Bali in November 2005,”
said Delphine.
The following year, they organised 4th Biorock
workshop in Gili Trawangan with the support of
the Karang Lestari Foundation from Pemuteran,
Bali, with 30 participants and TV crew from
ARTE. “During this workshop we built 10 more
structures,” said Delphine.
Two years later, the hands-on 6th Biorock
workshop in December 2008 was held in Gili
Trawangan again organised by Gili Eco Trust and
Global Coral Reef Alliance with the support of
PADI and local businesses such as dive shops,
restaurants and hotels. “We built 15 mores
structures, 5 in the north and 10 in front of
the village,” said the workshop organiser
Delphine, bringing the total number of
structures surrounding Gili Trawangan to 28.
Tom
on breakwater structures slowing wave intensity.The
latest Biorock workshop on designing, building
and maintaining coral reef structures was
conducted by Tom Goreau from the
Global
Coral Reef Alliance. The 52 participants
remained glued through the lectures that ranged
from the history of coral formation to factors
for restoration success to the scientific basis
of coral growth due to electrolytic reaction.
Staying a week on the island to learn all about
Biorock and acquire building skills were
Makassar University students, foreign marine
biologists, dive instructors from Argentina,
Sabah and Australia, resort/dive shop operators
and teachers.
As an observer, I got all dirty and wet too. I
tied the structures on land, dived underwater,
collected broken corals from the seabed and
transplanted them to the structure underwater,
fighting against sea currents and running low on
air very quickly. It is hard work too, carrying
heavy steel structures from the shore on to the
boat, then lowering them into the water before
proceeding to dive in for coral transplantation.
While I discovered with glee new muscles
emerging on my arms, I also basked in seeing
healthy coral growth on the older structures –
they were already natural habitats for the
underwater creatures to live, mate and
reproduce.
And all because of a bottom up approach, with
the islanders taking the lead. At the workshop,
Tom urged participants not to forget
community-based resources as the most important
success factor in establishing a long-term
marine restoration project. “The local people
know the issues and want to restore the
situation - they just need the tools and money.
Because their hope is to keep the environment
for their future generations,” he said.
Grassroots
democracy at Gili islands.Tom
highlighted the traditional top down approach
with NGOs pushing their agenda on communities
resulting in formation of marine protected area
(MPA) and police state imposition do not tackle
the root cause of coral reef degradation.
“Without large-scale restoration of habitat
quality the fishery decline will continue even
in the well-managed and funded MPAs,” said Tom,
adding, “It just does not work.”
“We need grassroots democracy,” said Tom.
With grassroots support and long-term
commitment, the building of new reefs paves the
way for restoration. Political will is first of
all needed at the local level backed by
historical knowledge and documentation of how
the reefs used to be. “The strategy is to accept
the fact that the corals that we have are
damaged and decide what to do about them.
Technology then can serve that role if we apply
it on a large scale,” he said. Community-based
fishery management using Biorock is presently
ongoing in the Philippines and Thailand as well.
Agreeing, Badrul Munir, MM, Vice governor of
Nusa Tenggara Barat (NTB) talks of the urgent
need to escalate the projects with greater
community involvement. “We need to grow new
coral reefs not just around Gili Trawangan, but
the 100 and more islands around here,” he said.
“Only then can we get our fish back,” said the
local leader.Charging
up marine creatures big and small.
The government of Lombok recognises that the
problem of bad fishing practices that led to
beach erosion as well. “We take this very
seriously and have established a monitoring
system daily,” said Malek. “When anyone spots
someone throwing a bomb in, we alert the
enforcement team.”
This enforcement is not the police however; they
are villagers who have assigned themselves with
such a role. In fact, at Gili Trawangan, there
is no police station or police officers. Crime
is dealt the way it used to be when time began –
public flogging and shaming. “We used to slash
their faces with knives and rub salt on them,
then soak them in the seawater until they beg
for mercy and repent,” said Ahyar Rosidi,
manager of Pondok Lita where I stayed. “Now we
just whack them with our hands and drag them
around for all to see so that they will be more
careful with this person when he comes around.”
Taking ownership of the island as their own home
is perhaps why the crime rate in this island is
low, the pathways are free of litter, public
facilities are well maintained, and businesses
chip in to contribute to the upkeep of the
tourism standards – including starting a tourism
school for youths.
Gili Trawangan Tourism School
The new tourism school set up in 2008 hopes to
build essential skills and training of the local
community to meet the
Maybe
tourism school with the right tools will keep
them indoors.fast growing tourism
industry on this island alone. “We want to make
sure they also have good jobs like
receptionists, accountants, serving staff at
restaurants and dive shop assistants and earn
good pay,” said Delphine, who also manages Big
Bubble Dive centre.
Having a job and earning money means that the
poor can thrive. It could also mean that the
noticeable drug pushing when night falls is
stamped out. “Our village elders find it hard to
prevent the youths from peddling weed because
they seem not to have alternative jobs,” said
Rosidi, adding that he wishes for more
businesses to be set up on the island to create
employment and boost the economy.
The tourism school, however, lacks funds and is
crippled by the lack of dedicated facilities.
The 30 students who enrolled into the two- and
three-year programme this year share the same
compound as high school kids. According to
Rosidi, only 15% of the funds come from the
government under the Lombok municipality; the
rest is contributed by the 70 businesses
operating in the island (each giving USD4-50 a
month) and from well-wishers.
Future
divemasters, hopefully, these kids of horsecar
driver Wayas.“We need more money
so we can buy books, computers and sponsor more
people studying tourism,” explains Delphine. Her
dive shop sells postcards, pledging 25% of sales
proceeds to the tourism school fund. According
to Rosidi, donations such as textbooks, plain
writing books and pens will also come in handy.
Visitors making a trip to the island can contact
Gili Eco
Trust to find out how they can contribute to
the island’s ecotourism needs and skills
training.
Underwater photography courtesy of Scotty Graham. Rest by Mallika Naguran.
About the Sixth Indonesian
Biorock Workshop
The workshop inaugurated the new PADI
Introduction to Biorock Process - Distinctive
Specialty, which can only be offered at
locations with Biorock projects, and taught by
PADI Instructors who are also Biorock Training
Course graduates. The workshop is supported by
PADI Asia Pacific and Project Aware.
For more information, visit:
Global Coral Reef Alliance www.globalcoral.org
Contact Dr Thomas J Goreau at
goreau@bestweb.net
Gili EcoTrust
www.giliecotrust.com
Send enquiries, donations to Gili Eco Trust
through
info@giliecotrust.com
Accommodation and activities information www.gili-paradise.com
See related Gaia Discovery article on stressed corals and how Biorock comes to the rescue.
Read about Thomas J Goreau
background and motivations.