The Philippine government has established a major new marine protected area off the coast of Panaon Island, shielding one of the world’s healthiest coral ecosystems from unregulated fishing, development, and climate stress. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. signed the legislation creating the Panaon Island Protected Seascape in 2025 C.E., covering 151,000 acres within the Pacific Coral Triangle — a region scientists consider essential to global ocean health.
At a glance
- Coral reef protection: The Panaon Island Protected Seascape covers 151,000 acres in the Pacific Coral Triangle, one of the most biodiverse marine regions on Earth.
- Coral reef protection quality: A 2020 Oceana expedition found coral cover in the area runs three times higher than the Philippine national average, signaling exceptional reef health.
- Community governance: A dedicated Protected Area Management Board — including local fisherfolk, community representatives, and government agencies — will set and enforce the seascape’s rules.
Why this reef matters
The waters surrounding Panaon Island do more than look beautiful. They function as a critical corridor for some of the ocean’s most threatened species.
Whale sharks pass through. Sea turtles breed here. The seagrass beds and mangrove forests lining the coast act as natural buffers against storm surges and coastal erosion — protections that communities in this part of the Philippines depend on directly. Fish stocks in the area provide food security for local fishing families who have worked these waters for generations.
The reef’s above-average coral cover also makes it more resilient to bleaching events driven by rising ocean temperatures, which have devastated reefs across the Pacific and Indian Oceans. That resilience is increasingly rare. The Coral Triangle Initiative, a multilateral partnership covering the broader region, has long identified this zone as among the most ecologically significant on Earth — home to roughly 76% of all known coral species and more than 3,000 species of reef fish.
A community-led path to legal protection
This outcome did not happen quickly or easily. Local fisherfolk, scientists, and municipal officials spent years building the case for formal legal protection — a process that required sustained coordination across communities with different economic pressures and priorities.
In May 2025 C.E., advocates organized a cultural event specifically to rally public support for the law’s passage, blending celebration with civic urgency. That moment of visible momentum helped carry the legislation forward.
The model deserves close attention. Rather than imposing conservation rules from the national government downward, the Panaon Island framework places decision-making authority in a management board that includes the people who live and fish there. Science guides the rules. Local needs shape how those rules are applied. Fishing and tourism are not banned outright — they are regulated, balancing livelihoods with conservation outcomes.
Oceana, whose 2020 expedition documented the area’s exceptional coral cover, has called this region among the most important marine ecosystems in the western Pacific. The organization has been a consistent advocate for the seascape’s legal protection, working alongside local communities throughout the campaign.
The 30×30 pledge and what it means in practice
The Philippines is a signatory to the global 30×30 initiative, which commits participating nations to protecting 30% of the world’s lands and oceans by 2030 C.E. That target remains ambitious — and contested.
Critics have pointed out that some protected areas exist mainly on paper, with little enforcement or real community buy-in. The Panaon Island designation attempts to address that concern directly through its management board structure, which creates accountability at the local level rather than deferring it to a distant agency.
Still, legal protection is only the beginning. Enforcement capacity, funding continuity, and climate conditions will all shape whether the seascape thrives or gradually erodes under pressure. The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services has documented how even well-designed protected areas can fall short without sustained political and financial commitment. The risk is real, and it applies here.
A signal for the broader ocean
The Panaon Island Protected Seascape is one data point in a larger story. Globally, the push to expand marine protection has gained real momentum. More countries are translating international pledges into domestic law — and doing so in ways that center the communities who know these waters best.
The Philippines, as one of the world’s most biodiverse archipelagos, carries particular weight in this conversation. What happens to its reefs matters far beyond its own coastlines. For the fishers, the reef, and the species that depend on both, turning a pledge into law is a meaningful distinction — and one that took years of local advocacy to achieve.
For more on coral reef protection efforts worldwide, the momentum building around marine protected areas reflects a broader recognition: that healthy oceans and healthy coastal communities are not competing goals, but the same goal.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Mongabay
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana’s marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- More good news from around the world
- The Good News for Humankind archive on ocean conservation
About this article
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