Gili Eco Trust
Encyclopedia
Gili Eco Trust is a local non governmental organization created in 2000 to protect coral reefs from destructive fishing around the three Gili islands, off Lombok, Indonesia.
The Gili Eco Trust has extended its activities to many Eco projects to regenerate coral reefs, clean up, educate, do reef gardening, organize recycling and garbage selection, do some research and studies with universities, set up sustainable Eco tourism with green energies, give animal care clinic and much more.

History

In 1998 was founded the SATGAS by local people on Gili islands to protect coral. After el Nino in 1997-1998 and because of many degradation causes corals were in such a bad shape that local people decided to react and started patrolling around the islands. They entered into an agreement with fishermen to define fishing areas and lawful fishing practices. Fishermen were indeed fishing with dynamite and cyanide. This destructive method was one of the main causes of coral degradation.

The Gili Eco Trust was founded in 2000 by the dive shops on the Gili islands to financially support the SATGAS. An eco-tax of 50,000IDR (4€, US$5) is demanded from every diver to financially compensate fishermen who respect the agreement's terms.
In 2004 Delphine Robbe, part-time coordinator of Gili Eco Trust, imported the Biorock technology in Gili islands to launch a Coral Reefs Restoration Program. Since then 63 Biorock structures have been installed all around the Gili islands to regenerate their reefs.

Since 2006 the Gili Eco Trust has been organizing Biorock workshops every two years. In November 2006 took place the 4th international Biorock workshop. Two other workshops took place in November 2008 and November 2010 with always more participants from all around the world.
2009 was a turning point: the Gili Eco Trust extended its projects to land environment protection. To support all these projects, Delphine Robbe became full-time coordinator.

Now the Gili Eco Trust leads many various projects to ensure Gili islands' sustainable development and promote eco-tourism.

Projects

The Gili Eco Trust has implemented projects to protect and regenerate corals, and to preserve land environment on the Gili islands.

Coral Protection

The Gili Eco Trust cooperates with the SATGAS to protect coral reefs.
20 days per month and on call, members of the SATGAS patrol to be sure that no one destructs coral and that fishermen respect the agreement on fishing areas and lawful fishing practices.
The Gili Eco Trust and SATGAS are installing mooring buoys to avoid anchoring on coral reefs. Mooring buoys also help to mark the boundaries of fishing areas.

To know more about coral and how to protect it, the Gili Eco Trust has developed a partnership with Mataram University, Lombok. Students in PhD, specialized in marine biology, come to Gili Trawangan to do studies on coral and to learn about Biorock technology.
"Coral Watch" dives are also available in every dive shop. Data collected during the dive help Project Aware scientists in their studies on coral reefs.

Coral Restoration

Coral is facing so many factors of degradation that the Gili Eco Trust decided not only to protect coral reefs but to restore them too.

A Biorock Coral Reef Restoration Program has been implemented since 2006. Biorock method consists in installing new artificial coral reefs on the ocean floor. These reefs can have two positive roles: being ideal habitats for corals, fishes, shellfishes, mollusks, seaweeds, etc... and being efficient wave breakers which protect beaches from erosion. Now the Gili Eco Trust wants to develop a Biorock structure which would be provided with electricity by a turbine thanks to sea current. Thus Biorock method would be more sustainable.

Today 63 Biorock structures regenerate the Gili islands's coral reefs.

In the same time, the Gili Eco Trust organizes Biorock workshops every two years to teach people from all around the world about Biorock so that they can replicate it in other damaged coral areas.
In 2006 the workshop received 31 participants, 52 in 2008 and 80 in 2010.
These workshops are supported by PADI, Project Aware, the Global Coral Reef Alliance, Mataram University, the Lombok government and many businesses on Gili Trawangan.

Land Eco-Projects

The Gili Eco Trust has various activities on the Gili islands.
Waste Management

Gili Eco Trust's main project on land is improving waste management. Waste is a permanent issue for Gili islands, especially because of their tourism.
The Gili Eco Trust works with the FMPL (the waste collection and treatment company on Gili Trawangan) which collects waste every day. The waste dump has been rebuilt and an elevated road has been built to reach it even during rainy season.
Local people are used to burning their waste. This method is extremly polluting. The Gili Eco Trust tries to raise awareness about it and to change local habits and encourages recycling.
General compost has been created, more than a thousand coloured bins have been installed, reusable bags are distributed... Tetra briks are sent to Eco Bali, a partner of the Gili Eco Trust. Glass, cardboard, cans and plastic are recycled in building materials.
Finally the Gili Eco Trust organizes clean up days every first Friday of the month. Tourists can join children from the local school, volunteers from businesses, the Gili Eco Trust and the FMPL and get a free dive in exchange of their participation.
Vetiver Grass and Tree Planting

Another issue on the Gili islands is erosion. To fight beach erosion, Biorock strucures are installed near the beach to slow down waves and vetiver grass is planted. Vetiver grass is an efficient natural solution to maintain sand on the beach with roots that can reach 5 meters deep. On Gili Trawangan's hill trees are planted to limit landslides during rainy season. These Planting Program are led by the Gili Eco Trust in association with the local school.
Horses' Treatment

On Gili islands, horses suffer a bad treatment.
Whereas horses normally live about 25 years, they do not live more than a few years on Gili islands because of the amount of work they are demanded and the lack of care from their owners who ignore what they need. Pulling carts around the island wouldn’t be a problem for their health if they could drink fresh water and rest regularly, and be treated when they need to.
That’s why the Gili Eco Trust opens its clinic for free to the horses of the island every 1st and 15th day of the month, in association with the horse center Umalas from Bali and encourages businesses to install in front of their shop a fresh water bucket for the horses.

Cats' Sterilization

Special weeks are organized to sterilize cats by the Gili Eco Trust, helped by western veterinary surgeons and Doctore Gede from Lombok because cats are too numerous on Gili islands.

Turtles' protection

The Gili Eco Trust supports the turtles' preservation center. It installed a water movement system for the baby turtles of the center. The Gili Eco Trust also looks after a grown-up turtle which had been caught by fishermen who prefered to cut its forelegs than their net.

Raising awareness

To make things and behaviors really evolve, the Gili Eco Trust raises awareness amongst local inhabitants and tourists.

Every week Delphine Robbe, Gili Eco Trust manager, teaches the three local school’s classes about ecology and English. During 45 minutes, children from 6 to 12 years old think in English about solutions to preserve natural richness of Indonesia. Then they go to the school’s garden to cultivate tomatoes, cucumbers, eggplants, aloe vera and vetiver grass.

But the Gili Eco Trust does not only target children. To make every person on Gili islands improve his/her behavior, posters and notice boards have been put up.

Finally the Gili Eco Trust offers to come to businesses to train their staff in eco-behavior. In the same way, boats owners can be explained why coral is important and how to behave to not damage it.

Biorock

Biorock technology has been invented by Professor Wolf Hilbertz and Doctor Thomas J. Goreau at the end of the 1970s.

Principle

Biorock structures are made with crisscrossed metal stems which are crossed by a low-voltage current of 1,2Volts. These structures are installed on the ocean floor and pieces of corals are attached to them. These corals come from reefs in the neighborhood and were broken for various reasons (unaware divers, strong waves…).

The electric current, which is totally harmless for any organism, leads to electrolysis, causing a calcareous precipitation on the whole structure. This will not only avoid the unwanted appearance of rust which would weaken the structure, but, as coral’s skeleton is made of calcareous, the structure will, thanks to this reaction, become the best place for coral to develop.

Thus Biorock technology relies on a very simple principle: reproduction by electrolysis of the natural reaction occurring between coral, sea water, sun and dissolve minerals.

Results

We should rather say that Biorock technology’s electrolysis is catalysis of the natural reaction and not only a simple reproduction, as this electrolysis enables a coral’s development 2 to 6 times faster than in usual conditions. Normally coral grows from only some centimeters per year. And so getting its growth quicker is an efficient way to restore reefs.
Moreover coral on Biorock structures grows stronger and is more resistant to hazards it faces.

Hard corals are not the only ones to grow on Biorock structures: tunicates, bivalves, sponges and soft corals also come to develop at speeds higher than the average. On a Biorock structure, their survival and resistance rate is 20 to 50 times higher than in natural environment.

Finally, because Biorock technology relies on electrolysis, its impact benefits all corals and ecosystems around the metal structure in a perimeter with a wingspan of about thirty meters.

These already studied and proved by W. Hilbertz and T. Goreau facts are born out since the 1980s by the efficiency of Biorock structures installed all around the world. These structures contributed to damaged coral reefs’ restoration, enlargement of beaches touched by erosion, repopulation of marine areas with many species of fishes and other sea organisms…
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