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Australia works with Philippines in coral reef restoration

MANILA, Philippines — Australia continues to work with the Philippines on protecting the marine environment through coral reef restoration, Australian Ambassador HK Yu said yesterday.

Yu welcomed the signing of the UN High Seas Biodiversity Treaty, the historic global treaty on the world’s oceans, by the Philippines and Australia.

As of last Saturday, 75 nations and the European Union had signed the treaty while gathered at the 78th United Nations General Assembly in New York.

“Both have signed this important global treaty for protecting our oceans. We continue to work with the Philippines on protecting our marine environment through coral reef restoration, monitoring and governance, reducing marine plastics and geospatial marine mapping,” Yu said in a post on social media platform X (formerly Twitter).

Foreign Affairs Secretary Enrique Manalo told the UN General Assembly last Saturday that the Philippines is “proud to be among the first states to have signed this week, the Treaty on Marine Biodiversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction, which opens new windows to cooperate in the responsible stewardship of the high seas.”

The landmark UN treaty seeks to deliver stronger protections for the ocean under the framework of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

It is the first ever treaty to protect the world’s high seas that also seeks to strengthen the legal regime in the conservation and sustainable use of marine biodiversity in over two-thirds of the world’s ocean.

The Philippines expressed serious concern over the destruction of corals in Rozul Reef and called for an end to all ecologically harmful activities in the country’s exclusive economic zone.

US Ambassador MaryKay Carlson expressed alarm over

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