Global Biodiversity Framework targets

Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework target tracker for Sudan Marine Parks

7
GBF targets contributed to
1,826
km² protected area
3
active conservation programmes
2030
GBF deadline
Filter:
Completed
In progress
Planned
Target 3
30×30 — protect 30% of land and ocean by 2030
Sudan’s two marine parks protect ~2.94% of the national EEZ (66,412 km²). Both parks are IUCN Category II.
Active
62%
Effective management implementation score (METT baseline needed)
Sanganeb Atoll — 22 km², gazetted 1990. Only atoll in the Red Sea, rising from depths of 800 m.
Dungonab Bay — 2,800 km² (850.7 km² land, 1,950 km² marine), gazetted 2004 by Presidential decree.
GEF funding — GEF grant USD 4.1M + USD 20.7M parallel co-financing (total USD 25.3M) — covers Dungonab Bay MNP, Dinder NP and Jebel El Dair NP.
PERSGA network — Both parks are in the 12-site Regional MPA Network for the Red Sea & Gulf of Aden.
Key milestones
Sanganeb gazetted as first marine PA in Sudan1990
Dungonab Bay gazetted by Presidential decree2004
UNESCO World Heritage inscription — first marine site in Red Sea (criteria VII, IX & X)2016
GEF/UNDP/HCENR “Strengthened Protected Areas System” project launched — GEF grant USD 4.1M (USD 4.6M UNDP-administered budget)2021
METT management effectiveness assessment2025
New integrated management plan 2025–20302025
Learn more about Target 3 →
Target 4
Species recovery — halt extinction of threatened species, improve status
Active monitoring and research programmes for sharks, rays, dugongs, turtles, and seabirds — all IUCN Red Listed.
Active
55%
Proportion of flagship species with active monitoring programmes
Sharks & rays — 22 reef manta rays (Manta alfredi) captured and tagged in 2012: world’s first acoustic implants in any manta species (20 acoustic + 6 satellite tags). Hammerheads stable here despite >90% global decline.
Dugong (VU) — One of the most important populations remaining on the coast of Africa; the most northerly in the Red Sea. Seagrass beds at Dungonab are critical habitat. Bycatch mortality is the main threat.
Sea turtles — Up to 5 species nest here. Mukkawar Island’s eastern shore is one of the 2–3 most important turtle nesting sites in the entire Red Sea. SWOT small grant (USD 1,000) for nesting research underway.
Seabirds — Important Bird Area (IBA) designated 2001. 20 species recorded. White-eyed Gull & Sooty Falcon (NT) breed on Mukkawar Island. Exceptional osprey nesting density on islands.
Species programmes
IBA designation for Dungonab (BirdLife International)2001
22 reef manta rays captured & tagged — world’s first acoustic implants in mantas (Cousteau/The Deep)2012
Shark & Rays Programme — Darwin Initiative funding; 38-mooring acoustic array across 130 km coastline2013
Kessel et al. satellite tracking confirms DMNP boundaries spatially effective for manta rays (PLOS ONE)2017
SWOT grant awarded for sea turtle nesting research2021
Dugong bycatch reduction — gear modification trials2024
Long-term manta ray population trend assessment2026
Learn more about Target 4 →
Target 10
Sustainable management of marine and coastal areas, including fisheries
Sustainable use of marine resources while supporting the livelihoods of the Beja fishing communities in Mohammed Qol and Dungonab.
Active
40%
Sustainable fisheries practices in place within park boundaries
Oyster culture — Traditional oyster farming in Dungonab & Mohammed Qol is a major community income source, managed within park boundaries.
Dive regulations — Wild-anchoring by foreign liveaboard vessels rated HIGH threat (2020 IUCN COA). No-take zone enforced in SMNP. Regulations in development under GEF project Component 2.
Mooring buoys — PERSGA planning to deploy buoys at Sanganeb dive sites to eliminate anchor damage to corals.
Coral reef fish — Bumphead parrotfish (VU) and Napoleon wrasse (EN) have healthy populations here due to low fishing pressure — rare globally. All fishing prohibited within SMNP.
Milestones
Park management law enacted (Federal Protection & National Parks Law)1986
PERSGA Strategic Ecosystem Management (SEM) project2004
Dive operator code of conduct & permit system2024
Mooring buoy deployment at Sanganeb key dive sites2025
Learn more about Target 10 →
Target 11
Restore and enhance ecosystem integrity and connectivity
Restoration focus on mangroves, seagrass beds (critical dugong habitat), and coral reefs that experienced bleaching stress in the late 1990s.
In progress
28%
Ecosystem baseline surveys completed; restoration plans being developed
Mangroves — Three substantial areas: southern tip of Dungonab Peninsula, southern end of Mukkawar Island, mainland coast at Mersa Inkefal. Effluent from oyster farms is a monitored threat.
Seagrass beds — Extensive and diverse beds in Dungonab Bay are the primary food source for dugongs. Considered among the most ecologically significant seagrass areas in the western Indian Ocean.
Coral bleaching resilience — Dungonab Bay showed remarkable resilience to the 1998 global bleaching event. Recovery was confirmed in later surveys. Reefs elsewhere in the park remain healthy.
Coral at Sanganeb — 124–126 cnidarian species at Sanganeb (Mergner & Schumacher 1985; updated surveys); 260 coral species across both parks combined. Reefs ranked among the richest in the Red Sea.
Milestones
Cousteau Society baseline reef surveys completed2013
Seagrass extent mapping for dugong habitat assessment2024
Mangrove condition assessment & restoration plan2025
Coral bleaching monitoring protocol2025
Learn more about Target 11 →
Target 14
Integrate biodiversity into decision-making across sectors
Ensuring biodiversity values are embedded in national policy, ministry decision-making, and private sector (dive industry) operations.
Active
48%
Biodiversity integrated across government, NGO and private sector operations
Ministry of Tourism — WCGA sits under Ministry of Tourism, Antiquities & Wildlife. UNESCO inscription under criteria VII, IX & X elevated marine parks to national policy priority.
Red Sea University — UNESCO Chair in Marine Biology & Oceanography. MoU signed with Cousteau Society. Provides scientific basis for management decisions.
Awareness campaigns — “Did You Know?” Sudan Red Sea Campaign launched 2017. Children from Dungonab presented at UN General Assembly on World Ocean Day.
UNESCO MAB programme — National MAB Committee active. Links parks to Sustainable Development Goals and Post-2020 biodiversity agenda.
Milestones
National MAB Committee establishedpre-2016
Cousteau–Red Sea University MoU signed under UNESCO auspices2016
“Did You Know?” awareness campaign launched2017
Dungonab children present at UNGA World Ocean Day2017
GEF project Component 4: gender mainstreaming & M&E2024
Learn more about Target 14 →
Target 16
Sustainable consumption — reduce the biodiversity footprint of consumption
Shifting dive tourism from extractive to sustainable model, and developing community ecotourism as an alternative to overfishing.
In progress
35%
Ecotourism framework developed; community pilots active in Dungonab
Dive tourism — Shark & ray tourism generates US$314M annually worldwide. Sudan’s healthy shark populations have high ecotourism value. International visitors: ~2,500–3,000 per annum, predominantly SCUBA divers.
Community ecotourism — Activities under development with Dungonab & Mohammed Qol communities. GEF project Component 3 supports livelihood diversification.
Sudan Red Sea Resort — First and only eco-camp resort in Sudan, near Dungonab. Provides model for low-impact tourism accommodation.
Gender equity — GEF project explicitly addresses gender disparities in conservation benefits for coastal communities.
Milestones
Ecotourism strategy developed with local communities2016
Alternative livelihoods programme (Shark & Rays Programme)2016
GEF Component 3: community livelihoods diversification2023
Dive permit system & responsible diving certification scheme2025
Learn more about Target 16 →
Target 22
Participation of indigenous peoples and local communities in governance
Formal inclusion of the Beja people in park co-management and decision-making.
In progress
30%
Community consultation underway; formal co-governance structure being designed
Beja communities — Primary coastal communities: Amarar, Bishariin, Hadendowa sub-groups. Population 1.4M+ in Red Sea State. Traditional resource management systems recognised in park objectives.
SUDIA role — Sudanese Development Initiative embedded as community liaison in GEF project. SUDIA–WCGA 5-year partnership signed Nov 2020.
Cultural heritage — Beja cultural practices linked to marine resource management recognised in park objectives and protected under Sudanese law.
Park objectives — Explicitly include: “Involve local communities and stakeholders as partners in park management” and “Support local economic and social development.”
Milestones
WCGA community liaison office established in Mohammed Qolpre-2016
SUDIA–WCGA 5-year partnership agreement signed2020
First joint SUDIA–WCGA annual planning workshop2021
Community co-management structure under GEF Component 32024
Formal free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) protocol2025
Learn more about Target 22 →