Power to the People, Power to the Reef: Harnessing Community Capital to Scale Adaption Delivery in the Great Barrier Reef
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. The Need for Community Voices in the GBR Adaptation Discourse
3. Potential for Community-Led Adaptation Deployment in the GBR
- Need to improve community involvement to boost local and institutional intervention capacities: Government investment and legislative support are essential for the successful delivery of large-scale adaptation efforts based on scientific models and methods. Similarly, scientific expertise and research are vital to identify appropriate intervention options, decision-support models and deployment methods [9,32]. However, regular and transparent communication of scientific results and progress, and involving local stakeholders in pilot deployments and monitoring are also crucial [9,32]. Early and consistent community involvement through information sharing and discussion platforms, and public consultations enables adaptation projects to build environmental awareness, community understanding of novel interventions, and secure social buy-in [8,9,32]. Without this community involvement, resilience-building efforts not only miss out on access to social infrastructure and capital but can risk community disengagement and the loss of trust or social license.
- Need to invest in industry engagement and capacity building to complement deployment procurement processes: Funding for community involvement in intervention deployment (and other community natural resource management programs) are typically competitive grants. This competitive approach hinders partnerships and the amalgamation of community resources towards the shared goal of strengthening reef resilience. A competitive funding model also impedes community-driven, ground-up environmental efforts that are often intrinsically collaborative, comprehensive and enduring, especially in the face of political changes and uncertainties [33,34]. Additionally, larger, well-resourced industry players and communities enjoy an unfair advantage with respect to participating in solutions deployment compared to smaller businesses and community groups with fewer resources [35]. The challenges and inequities experienced by some groups and communities with respect to involvement in interventions deployment has various implications: As under-resourced communities and groups are less able to contribute to interventions deployment, advocacy and decision-making with respect to the siting of conservation efforts, degraded reefs in smaller, less-resourced regions are often overlooked in favor of better-resourced regions [36]. This spatial bias can adversely impact excluded groups’ perceptions of adaptation projects and their social buy-in to these activities including contributing to intervention deployment efforts [35].
- Limited or competitive access to adaptation support and resources can reinforce the social inequities faced by Traditional Owners in Sea Country Management: The issues of inequitable access to adaptation interventions and spatial biases described above are especially acute in small and under-resourced Traditional Owner communities [37]. For example, reefs in regions that are severely impacted by coral bleaching are often overlooked for adaptation projects, in favor of areas with stronger social infrastructure and community resources. Inequitable access to support and resources and opportunities to participate can be deeply felt and exacerbate existing social injustices and inequities faced by some Traditional Owner communities [32,37,38,39]. For instance, intermittent funding for Traditional Owner-led conservation programs can exacerbate social and economic distress in already disadvantaged Indigenous communities and contribute to high rates of suicide amongst those whose businesses and occupations are adversely impacted [32,37,38,39].Additionally, Traditional Owners typically have deep cultural knowledge about the unique histories, management needs and characters of their Land and Sea Countries that cannot be divorced from their involvement in/ delivery of adaptation interventions. That is, as Australia’s ‘first scientists, farmers, engineers, innovators, and conservationists’, Traditional Owners have drawn on Ancestral Knowledge and cultural wisdom to effectively care for their environments through shifting seasons and climates [40]. For example, Indigenous Knowledge can help predict extreme weather events and select ecologically and culturally appropriate adaptation responses in the GBR [24,40]. If adequately considered, such Indigenous Insights can enhance adaptation outcomes [24,37]. However, in the context of the GBR, Traditional Owners, their customary obligations to their Ancestors and Traditional Lands, and their cultural protocols are largely underrepresented and incorporated in interventions delivery decisions and activities [32]. Nevertheless, more recently, research and development programs such as RRAP and the COTs Control Program are beginning to draw on Indigenous Knowledge for purposes such as selecting high value or high impact sites for the delivery of adaptation interventions [7,9,10,40].However, despite this slowly growing institutional appreciation of the importance of ‘weaving this [Traditional] knowledge with western science…[to] overcome key challenges’ and ‘hit the right markers’ for reef adaptation [40], Indigenous Knowledge is still poorly integrated into decisions and practices for interventions delivery in the GBR [32]. As a result, Traditional Owners often perceive institutional efforts to secure their involvement in interventions delivery as tokenistic. For example, government agencies in the GBR often work with specific Traditional Owner Groups under the Traditional Use of Marine Resources Agreements (TUMRAs) program [41]. TUMRAs are legislatively accredited community-based plans for the stewardship of Traditional resources and co-management of the Reef [41]. However, there are over 70 Torres Strait Islander and Aboriginal clan groups in the GBR [41], and no single body authorized to represent them all. Consequently, government agencies using TUMRAs to secure Indigenous involvement in interventions delivery may liaise with Traditional Owner groups who do not hold the cultural authority to speak for neighboring Sea Countries (and indeed boundaries may be uncertain or contested). Thus, such official frameworks, can undermine communities’ willingness to participate in Sea Country-related co-management and interventions delivery [38].
- Lack of consistent funding for community-driven or ground-up interventions deployment: Although local knowledge and grassroots-driven initiatives are considered to be intrinsically collaborative, cost effective and essential for reef resilience and adaptation [34,42,43,44,45], dedicated government funding for community-led or bottom-up interventions deployment is largely absent in the GBR [46]. While intervention methods are still being developed and refined, most government funding is directed to large-scale, top-down research initiatives, led by research institutions or government agencies [47], leaving limited resources for community groups, Traditional Owners, and local stakeholders to lead or co-design interventions. This funding gap not only restricts the scalability and inclusivity of adaptation efforts due to the exclusion of community infrastructure and social capital [11], but also risks overlooking the social and cultural dimensions, Traditional wisdom and community ownership critical to encouraging local stewardship and therefore long-term reef resilience [48].
- Financial and regulatory barriers to community/industry involvement in interventions delivery: There is keen interest and the potential for community and industry groups (such as tourism operators, not-for-profit organizations and commercial coral harvesters), as well as Traditional Owner groups and businesses to contribute to adaptation efforts. Amongst these actors, many commercial vessel operators and aquaculture businesses have a strong foundation in the skills, training and capacities needed to deliver adaptation solutions. However, a range of financial, logistical and regulatory barriers constrain the potential for their involvement. For example, vessels engaged in non-recreational activities, such as adaptation solutions deployment, are required to meet high work health and safety standards, have appropriate insurance cover (which can be prohibitive for in-water activities), and stringent permitting requirements. While we acknowledge the need for appropriate and rigorous regulatory oversight of activities in the GBR Marine Park, the costs and processes of meeting these regulations can be prohibitive for community groups and smaller commercial operators. Innovative solutions have the potential to establish appropriate standards and oversight without excluding hybrid enterprises from contributing to public environmental outcomes.
4. Innovative Strategies for Community-Led Adaptation Deployment
- Local leadership and coordination of intervention delivery: Community-led efforts to deploy adaptation interventions can improve community knowledge and capacities to contribute to adaptation interventions whilst simultaneously complementing institutional efforts. This ground-up approach is consistent with the principle of subsidiarity, that suggests communities should be empowered to make decisions that affect them [49]. It is worth noting that community-led interventions do not mean devolving all decisions to local actors, but rather emphasizes the complimentary roles played at different levels, e.g., governments, local communities, and by different sectors, e.g., tourism, marine services, Traditional Owners, community groups [50]. For communities, allowing local leadership engenders local ownership, autonomy, resilience and self-reliance, and ultimately their capacity to act at their own pace and within their resources [51]. Regional planning and coordination could support the down-scaled implementation of national reef resilience goals (such as those outlined in the Reef 2050 Plan) and demonstrate clear linkages to this high-level policy document. Encouraging a diversity of delivery models (across community, Traditional Owner, industry) recognizes that different groups or sectors have potential to contribute to overall delivery capacity, and will also bring their own values, knowledge, skills and capacities to the overall mission. In this way, for example, marine contractors could lead adaptation interventions in key reefs identified for their ecological values, whilst complementary local tourism, community and Traditional Owners could lead adaptation efforts at sites of local economic, social and cultural values. Locations, interventions, roles and resourcing would be allocated according to local needs and capacities, in a collaboration between Marine Park managers, research scientists, industry, community and Traditional Owners. Collaboration and partnerships would be a feature of this approach, as capabilities are blended to achieve critical functions.
- 2.
- Diversified and inclusive delivery models to community-led intervention delivery: The inequities of competitive procurement processes that advantage larger, well-resourced industry actors and communities to participate in interventions deployment over smaller, poorly resourced groups can be reduced through capabilities-based approaches to community involvement and the leveraging of existing community networks [58]. For example, a capabilities-based example of community involvement is the model of emergency incident management systems that maximizes the use of existing social capital and infrastructure. The Australasian Inter-Service Incident Management System (AIIMS) is the nationally recognized system for managing incidents including large emergencies, in Australia and New Zealand [59]. AIIMS provides guidelines for the formation of Incident Management Teams, with roles and teams based on the size, nature and complexity of emergencies [60]. Similarly, involving Traditional Owners and stakeholders in intervention delivery based on their capabilities rather than their sectoral affiliations, can overcome limitations (such as skills or capacity) in any sector or group. For example, whilst individual fishers or tourism operators may not be able to independently deliver adaptation solutions due to their skill or resource limitations, a flexible team comprising varyingly skilled community members contributing different types of social capital can overcome this challenge. Thus, the delivery of reef interventions can be amplified by allowing for flexible community-based teams with a diversity of expertise, philosophical approaches and resources, whose numbers can vary as needed.
- 3.
- Foundational capacity building in areas of need: Many funding opportunities for Traditional Owners or community groups inevitably reinforce inequity. This is because small groups often lack the baseline capacity to meet eligibility criteria for grants or procurement processes. These include basic business development, infrastructure like boats and sheds, and for Traditional Owners, access to traditional sea Country. Whilst these capacity gaps are not considered to be the ‘core business’ of environmental programs, these needs are often unaddressed in community development initiatives as well. This gap is particularly felt in Traditional Owner groups, wherein ranger programs provide one of very few community-based opportunities for youth to gain foundational work experience. Although ranger groups are a natural fit for sea Country management and Traditional Owner aspirations, these groups are often lacking in key business skills and infrastructure. We propose the following solutions to these challenges:
- Partner and mentor within and across regions, building on some of the principles of programs such as the Family-by-Family Program [54]. Under this program, families support other families to build their confidence, self-agency and resilience, thereby offering pathways to shift out of the negative effects of intergenerational disadvantage.
- RRAP small-scale pilot trials have supported Traditional Owner capacity building in the southern GBR. These capacity-building efforts, which have also involved Traditional Owners from other Sea Countries have served to build skills and connect groups across the region [64].
- 4.
- Flexible funding and support for community-led deployment initiatives: Funding is a key barrier and enabler of community-led initiatives. Adopting a shared leadership and diversified delivery model with local leadership requires changes to funding arrangements. For greater chances of success, community-led initiatives must be strategically supported by flexible government funding and partnerships that are separate from formal procurement-based or competitive project funding processes that are currently a feature of community involvement in adaptation interventions and other natural resource management activities. We have already described the limitations of conventional funding arrangements in Section 2 of this essay: To overcome these limitations, we propose the allocation of a certain level of base funding to enable regional and/or local coordination, capacity building and knowledge sharing. The recommended key features of this funding are below:
- Funding must be flexible in how and when it is applied to meet these goals, thereby allowing uptake that is fit for local circumstances. Various international studies confirm that flexible funding structures are an effective means of enabling local governments to implement equitable resilience strategies that reflect local priorities and support community capacity building [65,66].
- Enduring or for at least five-year funding cycles as the minimum timeframe: Short-term funding cycles of three years or less are disruptive and particularly challenging for smaller organizations or groups where project funding is often a significant component of total revenue [67].
- Currently, permit-bearing commercial operators in the GBR levy an environmental management charge on Reef visitors [68]. This fee of approx. AUD $8 per person per day, is remitted to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, for its management of the Reef [68]. We propose that a proportion of this environmental charge or a supplementary charge be used as base funding to support regionally coordinated, and community-led adaptation efforts. Several international destinations such as the Balearic Islands in Spain, New Zealand, Thailand and Mexico have successfully implemented tourism levies [69]. These levies serve as a durable and scalable means of supporting community-led stewardship and nature-based solution whilst also ‘buffering communities and economies from future shocks that originate from a range of sources, including climate change or economic and political upheavals’ [65].
- To support job retention and alleviate post-COVID economic hardship amongst GBR tourism operators, funding was provided on a competitive basis for site monitoring and stewardship actions. This funding program offers an example of how investment and policy outcomes can be aligned across jobs and environment portfolios [70].
- Market mechanisms such as credits and offsets are increasingly being promoted and adopted for biodiversity as well as carbon outcomes [71,72]. Whilst developing sound methodologies, functioning markets, and strong monitoring and accountability systems requires significant time and resources, these market schemes can effectively attract private sector funding for public good outcomes. Acknowledging the need for substantial upfront government investment, we propose that ‘Reef restoration credits’ could serve as a long-term funding source for industry operators to support nature-positive actions in the GBR.
- As outlined earlier in this section, the system of funding implementation of accredited regional NRM plans allowed local discretion in regional investment allocations with appropriate government oversight. A similar model may be used to support regional community-led reef care programs and interventions deployment in the GBR [73,74].
- Flexible, non-competitive grants to local governments for climate adaptation planning [75] can ensure equity across local government areas. Such a non-competitive funding model can be tailored to regional circumstances and not privilege higher capacity regions. The Climate Pollution Reduction Grants in the United States are an example of a flexible and inclusive funding model that has successfully enabled parties to access grant financing regardless of their climate planning capacities, prior climate action and competitive disadvantages in comparison to bigger and more well-resourced regions and groups [76].
- 5.
- Creative approaches to reduce regulatory barriers to community-led deployment: well-intentioned community efforts can be paralyzed by bureaucratic requirements. Typically, these involve financial, logistical and regulatory barriers, such as full commercial survey requirements for non-recreational vessels and onerous insurance-related workplace health and safety insurance protocols that are triggered when private and/or recreational enterprises are adjudged to be commercial operators. Often the latter preclude or reduce the ability to engage community volunteers, particularly for in-water activities. Whilst we recognize the importance of regulatory oversight in ensuring human safety in the GBR Marine Park, micro-barriers to involvement are very significant for community, Traditional Owners, and small businesses. Individually these groups lack the capacity to negotiate alternative arrangements, but as part of a collective, supported, where appropriate, by government and research institutions, creative solutions to some of these barriers may be developed. Regional coordination hubs such at the Cairns-Port Douglas Hub discussed earlier, could conduct the base analysis of the most significant barriers to community involvement in interventions delivery. These analyses could then feed into processes to address and minimize the barriers. Below are some creative approaches by which the regulatory barriers to community involvement in interventions deployment may be surmounted:
- Discussions of the seemingly perverse regulatory requirements with relevant regulatory agencies could reveal possible alternatives such as a community/public good category that falls between recreational and commercial survey requirements. A successful example of private or recreational vessels carrying out conservation actions in a hybrid—neither recreational nor commercial category—is the World Wildlife Fund’s Coastal Communities Initiative operating across 29 countries [16]. This initiative enables small-scale fishers and local groups to engage in community-led marine conservation activities such as co-management, habitat restoration, etc., outside the bounds of formal commercial structures and regulatory requirements [16].
- Working closely with relevant permitting authorities may highlight how community-led resilience efforts may be supported through changes to the reef permitting and zoning systems. Some options of changes include the incorporation of community management overlays in zoning plans to enable community-led interventions under specific conditions in designated areas. The Corals for Conservation-led Reefs of Hope initiative in the Pacific is an example of such a program that has successfully collaborated with governments and permitting agencies to embed community-led conservation into formal reef management regulatory frameworks [15]. This UNESCO-backed initiative has facilitated community-led actions during emergencies such as marine heatwaves and extreme weather events, thereby bolstering institutional responses and resilience efforts. The program has also enabled community involvement in actions such as coral translocation, larval collection and seeding, etc., during scientifically grounded seasons and opportunities to enhance reef adaptation and resilience [15].
- The establishment of triggers could allow for rapid community responses following disasters such as cyclones or bleaching events. The development of these triggers and response procedures could be modeled on the Australasian Inter-Service Incident Management System (AIIMS) (outlined earlier in this paper), that guides the formation and mobilization of Incident Management Teams based on the size, nature and complexity of emergencies [59,60]. For example, the above-mentioned Reefs of Hope initiative [15] demonstrates how rapid triage and repair carried out by ‘competent divers under informed supervision…can be very cost-effective’ means of aiding recovery [77]. These emergency measures that are within the scope of community-based projects [77] include restorative actions such as ‘cementing or epoxying large cracks in the reef framework, righting and reattaching corals, sponges and other reef organisms…storing detached [and/or healthy in the case of bleaching events] organisms in a safe environment until they can be reattached’ [77] or removing debris and foreign objects that can damage intact reefs [77].
- Examining how regulatory and insurance requirements are fulfilled by not-for-profit and citizen science initiatives [78,79,80]. For example, in Queensland catchments, Queensland Water & Land Carers (QWALC) [81] acted as an aggregator for the insurance of land care and related NRM initiatives led by volunteers.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AIIMS | Australasian Inter-Service Incident Management System |
AMSA | Australian Maritime Safety Authority |
COTs | Crown-of-Thorns starfish |
EMC | Environmental Management Charge |
GBR | Great Barrier Reef |
LMAC | Local Marine Advisory Committee |
MSQ | Marine Safety Queensland |
NAP | National Action Plan for Salinity and Water Quality |
NHT | Natural Heritage Trust |
NRM | Natural Resource Management |
RAC | Reef Advisory Committee |
RRAP | Reef Restoration and Adaptation Program |
QWALC | Queensland Water and Land Carers |
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Majumdar, A.; Eberhard, R.; Vella, K.; Smith, A.; Donnelly, R.; Foster, D.; Erhart, D.; Meldrum, T.; Iovanella, P.; Brodhurst, O.; et al. Power to the People, Power to the Reef: Harnessing Community Capital to Scale Adaption Delivery in the Great Barrier Reef. Sustainability 2025, 17, 8116. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17188116
Majumdar A, Eberhard R, Vella K, Smith A, Donnelly R, Foster D, Erhart D, Meldrum T, Iovanella P, Brodhurst O, et al. Power to the People, Power to the Reef: Harnessing Community Capital to Scale Adaption Delivery in the Great Barrier Reef. Sustainability. 2025; 17(18):8116. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17188116
Chicago/Turabian StyleMajumdar, Ananya, Rachel Eberhard, Karen Vella, Adam Smith, Ryan Donnelly, Darren Foster, Dorean Erhart, Trevor Meldrum, Peppi Iovanella, Olivia Brodhurst, and et al. 2025. "Power to the People, Power to the Reef: Harnessing Community Capital to Scale Adaption Delivery in the Great Barrier Reef" Sustainability 17, no. 18: 8116. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17188116
APA StyleMajumdar, A., Eberhard, R., Vella, K., Smith, A., Donnelly, R., Foster, D., Erhart, D., Meldrum, T., Iovanella, P., Brodhurst, O., Tarte, D., & Kimberley, D. (2025). Power to the People, Power to the Reef: Harnessing Community Capital to Scale Adaption Delivery in the Great Barrier Reef. Sustainability, 17(18), 8116. https://doi.org/10.3390/su17188116