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Privacy

Last updated: 24 April 2026

1. Introduction

This privacy policy describes how the Pacific Islands Roundtable ("PIRT", "we", "us") collects, uses, and protects personal data through this website.

2. Information we collect

We collect: information you provide (registration, contact form submissions, newsletter sign-up, PIELA nominations); usage data (with consent — anonymous analytics via Google Analytics 4); and technical data (IP, browser type, referrer).

3. How we use your information

To deliver site features (registration, agenda, bookmarks); to send service emails (confirmations, password resets, newsletters you subscribe to); and to improve the site via aggregated analytics.

4. Cookies

See the Cookie policy for details. We do not set non-essential cookies before you opt in.

5. Sharing your data

We do not sell your data. We share with service providers (mail, hosting) only as needed, under contract, and never for marketing purposes.

6. Your rights

You may request access, correction, deletion, or export of your data — contact us. EU/EEA visitors have rights under GDPR; Pacific visitors are covered by the equivalent regional protections.

7. Data retention

Registration data is kept for 7 years (audit). Newsletter subscriptions until you unsubscribe. Analytics data 14 months max.

8. Security

We use HTTPS, encrypted database backups, and access controls. Despite our care, no internet transmission is 100% secure.

9. Contact

Questions? Email the PIRT Secretariat via the contact form. Final legal text supplied by PIRT/SPREP legal — placeholder copy.

Privacy Policy

Terms

Last updated: 24 April 2026

1. Acceptance of terms

By using this site you agree to these terms. If you do not agree, please do not use the site.

2. Use of content

Content (text, images, documents) is owned by PIRT or its members. You may share with attribution for non-commercial use; commercial reuse requires written permission.

3. User contributions

By submitting content (abstracts, posters, comments) you grant PIRT a non-exclusive licence to display it on the site and in conference materials.

4. Accounts

You are responsible for the security of your account. Notify us immediately of any unauthorised use.

5. Intellectual property

All trademarks (PIRT, PIELA, SPREP, member logos) belong to their respective owners.

6. Disclaimer

The site is provided "as is". PIRT is not liable for indirect or consequential losses arising from use of the site.

7. Changes

We may update these terms; the "Last updated" date will reflect changes.

8. Governing law

These terms are governed by the laws of Samoa, where the PIRT Secretariat is hosted by SPREP.

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Terms of Use

Cookies

Last updated: 24 April 2026

1. What are cookies

Cookies are small text files stored on your device when you visit a website. They help sites remember preferences and measure usage.

2. Cookies we use

Necessary (always on): session, language preference, cookie-consent record. Analytics (with consent): GA4 (_ga, _ga_*) — anonymised IP, expiry 14 months. Marketing: not used.

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3. Managing cookies

You can withdraw consent at any time via the cookie banner at the bottom of any page, or by clearing site data in your browser.

4. Third-party cookies

Embedded third-party content (YouTube videos, Twitter timelines) may set their own cookies — we do not control these. We aim to use privacy-preserving embeds where possible.

5. Retention

See the table above for per-cookie expiry. Necessary cookies are removed when you close your browser.

6. Contact

Questions about cookies? Contact us.

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Cookie Policy

Home

11th Pacific Islands Conference for Nature Conservation

Nature at the heart of the Pacific.

A coalition of 16 organisations working across 22 Pacific Island countries and territories for biodiversity, climate-resilient ecosystems and the Vemööre Declaration.

Conference opens in — —

PIRT at a glance

👥
16
Member organisations
🤝
6
Working groups
🌏
22
Pacific Island countries & territories
🏝
11th
Pacific Islands Conference

A regional framework. Three pillars. One Pacific.

🌿

Pillar 1: Healthy ecosystems

Restoration, protected areas, and species recovery across the Pacific.

Implementation 2021-2025 (62%)
🌊

Pillar 2: Sustainable livelihoods

Nature-based solutions for climate, food security and ocean health.

Implementation 2021-2025 (48%)
🏛

Pillar 3: Effective governance

Capacity, finance, and law to deliver on regional commitments.

Implementation 2021-2025 (55%)

Six ways to engage with PIRT

📝

Submit an abstract

Share your research at the 11th Conference.

Closes 30 Jun 2026
🎤

Propose a session

Convene a session at the 11th Conference.

Closes 15 Jul 2026
🤝

Host a side event

Run a parallel side event in Noumea.

Closes 15 Jul 2026
💼

Sponsor the conference

Support Pacific delegates and content tracks.

Open all year
🙋

Volunteer

Join the on-site team in Noumea.

Closes 31 Jul 2026
🎓

Travel scholarship

For Pacific early-career delegates.

Closes 30 Jun 2026

Stay close to Pacific nature.

Quarterly EN/FR newsletter with stories from the working groups + the conference.

About

Our mission

To safeguard Pacific biodiversity through coordinated, indigenous-led, and science-grounded conservation across the 22 island countries and territories of the Pacific.

Vision

A Pacific where nature and people thrive together — where reefs, forests, and traditional knowledge are passed on stronger than we received them.

How we work

🤝

Convening

We host the biennial Pacific Islands Conference on Nature Conservation — the regions flagship gathering of 200+ practitioners, ministers, and indigenous leaders. Between conferences, six thematic working groups convene quarterly to advance shared priorities, joined by ad-hoc dialogues across all 22 island countries and territories.

📋

Working groups

Six thematic groups carry the day-to-day programme: Marine, Terrestrial, Climate, Indigenous knowledge, Youth, and Funding & Policy. Each is co-led by member organisations and meets quarterly to align field projects, share methodology, and surface advocacy priorities for the coalition. See our working groups →

🌿

Field action

Member organisations run conservation projects on the ground — locally managed marine areas, reef monitoring, terrestrial restoration, traditional knowledge documentation. PIRT coordinates the shared methodology, pools data into a regional dashboard, and channels coalition funding to fill site-level gaps.

Governance

PIRT operates under a steering committee of representatives from its 18 member organisations. The Secretariat is hosted by SPREP in Apia, Samoa. See governance for the full structure.

History

The Pacific Islands Roundtable for Nature Conservation has met every two years since 1998.

  1. 1998
    PIRT founded

    Inaugural Pacific Islands Conference convenes at Apia, Samoa with 9 founding member organisations.

  2. 2008
    Coalition expanded

    Membership grows to 14 organisations; first dedicated Secretariat established at SPREP.

  3. 2018
    PIELA awards launched

    First Pacific Islands Environmental Leadership Awards held at PIC9, Suva.

  4. 2024
    2024–2028 strategy adopted

    Five-year strategic plan endorsed at PIC10, Apia, Samoa.

  5. 2026
    PIC11 in Noumea

    11th conference convening 200+ delegates 7–11 September in New Caledonia.

A coalition for Pacific nature, founded in 1997.
PIRT brings together 16 organisations across 22 Pacific Island countries and territories — for biodiversity, climate-resilient ecosystems, and the Vemööre Declaration.

Mission

Our mission

To safeguard Pacific biodiversity through coordinated, indigenous-led, science-grounded conservation.

Placeholder copy.

Governance

Governance

PIRT operates under a steering committee of representatives drawn from member organisations.

Placeholder copy.

Working groups

6
Working Groups
30+
Co-chairs & Secretariats
16
PIRT member orgs contribute
Open
To new members

Choose a working group

Each group is mandated to address an urgent topic for nature conservation in the Pacific Islands. Members come from across the 16 PIRT organisations and beyond — the only requirement is expertise in the area of the group.

How working groups operate

A predictable rhythm of meetings and workshops, with shared documents and a working group secretariat that keeps the group moving between gatherings.

Quarterly meetings

Each group meets at least quarterly — most online, with at least one in-person workshop per year. Meetings are themed around a regional topic and open to invited contributors.

See upcoming meetings →

Topical webinars & workshops

Working groups co-host technical webinars on Pacific priorities — IUCN NbS Standards, GBF Target 3 implementation, invasives biosecurity, environmental law reform — open to the wider community of practice.

Browse events →

Regional knowledge hub

Each group curates working documents, technical guidance and member updates — published through PIRT and shared with the wider region via the Pacific BioScapes Programme.

Open documents →

Join a working group

Working group membership is open to anyone with expertise in the area of the group — not only PIRT member organisation staff. Reach the secretariat to express interest.

Secretariat

Secretariat

The PIRT Secretariat is hosted by SPREP in Apia, Samoa.

Birdlife International (Pacific)

Acronym
BIRDLIFE
Country
Fiji
Role at PIRT
Birdlife International (Pacific) contributes regional expertise and networks to PIRT working groups, partner programmes and the Pacific BioScapes initiative.

Role at PIRT

Birdlife International (Pacific) is a founding member (BIRDLIFE) of the Pacific Islands Roundtable for Nature Conservation. Birdlife International (Pacific) contributes regional expertise and networks to PIRT working groups, partner programmes and the Pacific BioScapes initiative — supporting the four-year Pacific Islands Framework for Nature Conservation across all 22 Pacific Island countries and territories.

About the organisation

Birdlife International (Pacific) operates across the Pacific from a base in Fiji, contributing to nature conservation through capacity-building, technical assistance, partnerships with member states and civil society, knowledge management, and direct programme delivery on the ground. As a PIRT member, Birdlife International (Pacific) aligns its regional priorities with the Roundtable framework agreement and reports against pan-Pacific biodiversity targets.

Active programmes that intersect with PIRT

  • Pacific BioScapes — EU-funded action managed by SPREP; Birdlife International (Pacific) contributes regional or thematic expertise across the workstreams.
  • NBSAP coordination — supports member countries' updates of National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans aligned with the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.
  • GBF Target 3 (30×30) — area-based conservation work, including marine protected areas, indigenous-led conservation areas and trans-boundary corridors.
  • Conference 2026 — co-delivers the 11th Pacific Islands Conference for Nature Conservation and Protected Areas in Noumea.

Working group involvement

View all PIRT working groups →

Contact

Contact PIRT, or subscribe to updates.
The Secretariat answers within 5 working days. Choose a channel below or use the form.
  • 📍 Secretariat PIRT Secretariat (hosted by SPREP)
  • General enquiries For partnership questions, member enrolment, media
  • 🌿 Biodiversity Coordinator For species + protected-area work
  • 🤝 Working Group Leads For chair / co-chair contacts per WG
  • 📰 Press For media enquiries + interview requests
  • 🏝 Conference 2026 desk For programme, registration, sponsorship enquiries
  • 📱 Social channels Updates on LinkedIn + X (formerly Twitter)
  • Venue

    Centre Culturel Tjibaou — Noumea, New Caledonia
    Centre Culturel Tjibaou · Designed by Renzo Piano · Opened 1998

    Getting to Noumea, where to stay

    Noumea is the capital of New Caledonia and the gateway to the Pacific. The Tjibaou Cultural Centre sits 8 km north of the city centre on the Tina Peninsula, a 15-minute drive from downtown and 45 minutes from La Tontouta International Airport.

    🏛
    Architect
    Renzo Piano
    📅
    Opened
    1998
    📐
    Plenary capacity
    1,200
    From airport
    35 min

    Partner hotels — special rate for delegates

    Booking codes for the conference rate will be shared with registrants. Three partner hotels are within 5–25 minutes of the venue.

    XPF 28,000 / night

    Le Méridien Noumea

    Beachfront, 5 km from venue. Conference rate.

    20 min to venue · Free shuttle

    Booking link →
    XPF 22,000 / night

    Hilton Noumea La Promenade

    City centre, 4 km from venue. Conference rate.

    20 min to venue

    Booking link →
    XPF 18,000 / night

    Ramada Plaza Noumea

    Marina, 4 km from venue. Conference rate.

    30 min to venue

    Booking link →

    Visa & entry requirements

    Visa-free entry

    Citizens of EU member states, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, USA, Japan, Singapore and most South Pacific Island countries can enter New Caledonia for up to 90 days without a visa.

    Short-stay visa (≤ 90 days)

    If your country is not visa-exempt, apply for a short-stay Schengen-equivalent visa at the French consulate. PIRT can provide a letter of invitation to support your application — request via the registration confirmation email.

    Passport & vaccinations

    Valid passport with ≥ 6 months remaining beyond your stay. No mandatory vaccinations except yellow fever (if arriving from a yellow-fever-endemic country). COVID-19 entry requirements have been relaxed; check the latest advice from the New Caledonian Health Authority before travelling.

    Need help? Email visa@pirt.org for letter-of-invitation requests, or visit the New Caledonia government site for the latest entry rules.

    Choose a visit to Noumea

    Cultural day-trips to neighbouring islands, eco-tours to the South Lagoon (UNESCO World Heritage), and city walking tours can be booked through the conference travel desk.

    Travel desk →

    Speak with the Tjibaou Centre

    For accessibility, programme adjustments, or to coordinate side-events at the venue, the Centre's events team is available year-round.

    Centre Culturel Tjibaou →

    Accessibility

    Last updated: 24 April 2026

    1. Our commitment

    The Pacific Islands Roundtable is committed to providing a website that is accessible to the widest possible audience, regardless of technology or ability. We aim for conformance with WCAG 2.1 Level AA.

    2. Standards

    This site is designed and tested against WCAG 2.1 Level AA. We use automated testing (Pa11y CI, Lighthouse) on every release plus manual screen-reader testing on key flows.

    3. Accessibility features

    • Skip-to-content link on every page
    • Keyboard navigation for menus, dropdowns, and forms
    • Visible focus indicators on all interactive elements
    • Alt text on all informative images
    • Color contrast ratios meeting AA on all text
    • Bilingual EN/FR with proper lang attributes
    • Honors prefers-reduced-motion

    4. Known issues

    We are working on the following items:

    • Some embedded third-party content (e.g. registration payment widget) may not yet meet AA — being addressed with the gateway vendor.
    • Older PDF documents in the library are being remediated; new uploads from 2026 onward are accessible.

    5. Feedback

    If you encounter an accessibility barrier, please contact us. We aim to respond within 5 business days.

    6. Preparation of this statement

    This statement was prepared in April 2026 by the PIRT digital team and SPREP communications. It is reviewed quarterly and updated when significant changes are made to the site.

    Accessibility Statement

    Youth

    A Pacific-led, youth-driven movement for biodiversity

    🌺

    Vision

    The Pacific Youth Biodiversity Network — a GYBN Pacific Chapter — is the Pacific arm of the Global Youth Biodiversity Network. Launched in 2024 with SPREP and PIRT support, it connects young Pacific Islanders driving biodiversity action.

    🎯

    Mission

    Bring young Pacific voices into national + regional biodiversity work — and equip them with skills, mentorship and opportunities to shape Pacific conservation.

    Four interlinked programme streams

    🛠

    Capacity-building

    Workshops on biodiversity policy, GBF implementation, and Pacific environmental law for youth across 22 PICTs.

    📣

    Youth representation

    Pacific youth seats at PIRT working groups, Conference, and SPREP environment ministers' meetings.

    🤝

    Collaborative networks

    Connections with regional youth orgs (PYC, MIYV) and global networks (CYEN, GYBN).

    🌟

    Youth Ambassadors Programme

    2-year cohort programme placing 16 Pacific Youth Ambassadors with PIRT member organisations.

    Pacific youth in action

    GYBN Pacific Chapter launched

    Pacific youth lead biodiversity action — first regional chapter convened in Suva.

    Pacific youth take the floor at CBD COP-16

    Cali, Colombia — Pacific Youth delegation joined the GBF implementation summit.

    Youth thesis confirmed for the 11th Pacific Islands Conference

    Noumea 2026 — A dedicated youth track at the conference programme.

    Two ways to step into Pacific biodiversity work

    🌱

    Join GYBN Pacific

    Sign up to the network — events, working group invitations, and the youth biodiversity newsletter.

    Join the network →
    🎤

    Become a Youth Ambassador

    The Youth Ambassadors Programme places 16 Pacific Youth Ambassadors with PIRT member organisations for a 2-year cohort.

    Apply for the cohort →

    Pacific leaders endorse 2026 PIRT roadmap

    News image — Pacific landscape
    Category
    Author
    Aliisi Mafua

    Pacific leaders gathered in Apia last month to formally endorse the PIRT 2026 roadmap — a comprehensive five-year framework for coordinated biodiversity conservation across all 22 Pacific Island Countries and Territories. The roadmap, developed over 18 months of regional consultation, establishes binding commitments on marine protected area coverage, indigenous knowledge integration, and climate finance mobilisation. Its adoption marks the strongest political alignment on Pacific conservation priorities since the founding of the network in 1998.

    The roadmap was endorsed by environment ministers from 16 PICTs, with the remaining six signalling intention to endorse following domestic consultation processes expected to conclude by mid-2026. Key commitments include the establishment of a permanent Pacific Biodiversity Monitoring Council, the creation of a regional biodiversity emergency fund capitalised at USD 25 million over five years, and the development of a Pacific-specific reporting framework aligned with the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework targets.

    PIRT Executive Director Dr Amelia Bale described the endorsement as a turning point for the network. "For the first time, we have a document that carries both political authority and operational specificity," she said at the closing session. "Every commitment in the roadmap has a named responsible party, a timeline, and a measurable indicator. That accountability architecture is new, and it matters."

    Implementation of the roadmap will be overseen by a new Regional Steering Committee meeting quarterly, with PIRT providing technical secretariat support. The first quarterly review is scheduled for July 2026 in Port Vila, where member organisations will present initial implementation plans aligned with the roadmap priorities.

    New $2M funding pool for community reef monitoring

    News image — Pacific landscape
    Category
    Author
    Eseta Sevati

    A new USD 2 million funding pool dedicated to community-based reef monitoring has been established through a partnership between PIRT, the Coral Triangle Initiative, and three bilateral development agencies. The pool provides grants of USD 50,000 to USD 200,000 to community organisations conducting systematic coral reef surveys using the Pacific standardised monitoring protocol, with a particular focus on sites identified as climate refugia — areas where reefs have shown greater resilience to recent bleaching events.

    The funding pool responds to a critical gap identified in the 2025 State of Pacific Reefs report, which found that fewer than 30 percent of high-priority reef sites in the Pacific are monitored with sufficient frequency and standardisation to detect meaningful trends. Community-based monitoring offers a cost-effective solution that simultaneously builds local capacity and generates scientifically credible data, but has historically been underfunded relative to academic and government-led monitoring programmes.

    Applications for the first funding round are now open and will close on 31 July 2026. Eligible applicants include registered community organisations, conservation NGOs, and indigenous community groups operating in one or more Pacific Island Countries and Territories. Applicants must demonstrate access to trained monitors using the PIRT standardised protocol and must commit to uploading data to the Pacific Biodiversity Information Facility within 30 days of each survey.

    PIRT member organisations can access technical assistance for application preparation through the Grants Intelligence Service. Priority will be given to applications from countries with less than three existing permanent monitoring sites and from organisations monitoring sites identified as climate refugia in the 2025 State of Pacific Reefs report.

    PIRT 2026 conference call for abstracts now open

    News image — Pacific landscape
    Category
    Author
    PIRT comms team

    The organising committee for the 11th Pacific Islands Conference on Nature Conservation (PIC11) has formally opened the call for abstracts, with submissions accepted across six thematic streams. The deadline is 30 April 2026. PIC11 will convene in Noumea, New Caledonia from 7 to 11 September 2026, bringing together conservation scientists, indigenous leaders, policy-makers, and practitioners from across the Pacific and beyond.

    The six streams reflect the core priorities of the PIRT 2026 roadmap: marine and coastal ecosystems; terrestrial biodiversity and forests; climate adaptation and resilience; indigenous and traditional ecological knowledge; youth leadership and capacity; and biodiversity finance and justice. Submissions are welcome across all formats — oral presentations, interactive workshops, panel discussions, lightning talks, and field demonstrations. The programme committee particularly encourages submissions that integrate indigenous and scientific knowledge systems and that present findings from community-led monitoring or conservation projects.

    Abstract submissions should be 300 to 500 words and must specify the proposed stream, format, and presenter biography. All abstracts will be reviewed by a programme committee with representation from each of the six streams. Accepted presenters will be notified by 15 June 2026 and will be eligible for a discounted registration rate. Priority travel support is available for early-career researchers and indigenous knowledge holders from Pacific Island Countries and Territories with limited access to research funding.

    The full call for abstracts, including submission guidelines and stream descriptions, is available through the PIRT website. Prospective presenters are encouraged to review the programme principles, which prioritise Pacific voices, community relevance, and actionable findings over purely theoretical contributions.

    Indigenous knowledge working group meets in Suva

    News image — Pacific landscape
    Category
    Author
    Joe Vakatale

    PIRT's Indigenous Knowledge Working Group convened its second plenary meeting of the year in Suva last month, bringing together 28 knowledge holders, researchers, and conservation practitioners from 11 Pacific Island Countries and Territories. The meeting focused on developing the implementation framework for the Traditional Knowledge chapter of the Pacific Biodiversity Strategy 2026–2030, endorsed at the regional assembly in March.

    The core output of the meeting was agreement on a set of Pacific Traditional Knowledge Protocols — a framework governing how traditional ecological knowledge is documented, used, attributed, and protected within regional biodiversity programmes. The protocols draw on customary law principles from participating communities and are designed to complement, rather than replace, national intellectual property frameworks. They establish requirements for free, prior, and informed consent, benefit-sharing arrangements, and community veto rights over the commercial application of their traditional knowledge.

    Joe Vakatale, Chair of the working group, described the protocols as the most significant output in the group's history. "We have been told for years that traditional knowledge is valuable, but the systems around us were not built to protect it or to compensate the people who hold it," he said at the closing session. "These protocols change that — they create enforceable expectations, not just aspirational language."

    The working group also agreed to establish a Pacific Traditional Knowledge Registry, to be hosted by the University of the South Pacific and governed by a board of indigenous knowledge holders. Development of the registry is expected to begin in the third quarter of 2026, with the first community documentation cohort enrolling in early 2027. PIRT member organisations working on traditional knowledge documentation are invited to apply to participate in the pilot cohort.

    Conservation International (CI)

    Acronym
    CI
    Country
    Samoa
    Role at PIRT
    Conservation International (CI) contributes regional expertise and networks to PIRT working groups, partner programmes and the Pacific BioScapes initiative.

    Role at PIRT

    Conservation International (CI) is a founding member (CI) of the Pacific Islands Roundtable for Nature Conservation. Conservation International (CI) contributes regional expertise and networks to PIRT working groups, partner programmes and the Pacific BioScapes initiative — supporting the four-year Pacific Islands Framework for Nature Conservation across all 22 Pacific Island countries and territories.

    About the organisation

    Conservation International (CI) operates across the Pacific from a base in Samoa, contributing to nature conservation through capacity-building, technical assistance, partnerships with member states and civil society, knowledge management, and direct programme delivery on the ground. As a PIRT member, Conservation International (CI) aligns its regional priorities with the Roundtable framework agreement and reports against pan-Pacific biodiversity targets.

    Active programmes that intersect with PIRT

    • Pacific BioScapes — EU-funded action managed by SPREP; Conservation International (CI) contributes regional or thematic expertise across the workstreams.
    • NBSAP coordination — supports member countries' updates of National Biodiversity Strategies and Action Plans aligned with the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.
    • GBF Target 3 (30×30) — area-based conservation work, including marine protected areas, indigenous-led conservation areas and trans-boundary corridors.
    • Conference 2026 — co-delivers the 11th Pacific Islands Conference for Nature Conservation and Protected Areas in Noumea.

    Working group involvement

    View all PIRT working groups →