Tanzania
Introduction
The United Republic of Tanzania is an independent, sovereign coastal state that was formed of the union of two countries, namely Tanganyika (mainland) and Zanzibar (Unguja and Pemba islands) in 1964.
The entire coastline of Tanzania, including its inner waters and major and small islands, covers 1424km. The continental shelf is narrow, with the 200m depth contour occurring at about 4km offshore, except in the Zanzibar and Mafia channels where the shelf extends up to 80km from the mainland coast.
Tanzania’s (mainland and Zanzibar) Territorial Waters span 64 000km2 with the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) covering an area of 223 000km2. This area includes Zanzibar’s Unguja and Pemba islands. The Rufiji River is Tanzania’s largest river that drains into the Indian
Tanzania has a population of 57 million people (United Nations, 2019).
Tanzania has appointed a Focal Point to the Nairobi Convention to help coordinate efforts to protect, manage, and use the Western Indian Ocean at the national level.
Publications
- United Nations Environment Programme – Nairobi Convention 2015. Status of Birds in the Marine and Coastal Environment of the Nairobi Convention Area: Regional Synthesis Report.
- United Nations Environment Programme – Nairobi Convention 2016. Climate Strategy for the Nairobi Convention.
- ASCLME 2012. National Marine Ecosystem Diagnostic Analysis. Tanzania. Contribution to the Agulhas and Somali Current Large Marine Ecosystems Project (supported by UNDP with GEF grant financing)
- ASCLME 2012. Tanzania National Level Policy and Governance Assessment for Marine and Coastal Resources. Contribution to the Agulhas and Somali Current Large Marine Ecosystems Project (supported by UNDP with GEF grant financing)
- United Nations Environment Programme and Secretariat of Nairobi Convention (2009). The Strategic Action Programme (SAP) for the Protection of the Western Indian Ocean from Land-based Sources and Activities. Nairobi, Kenya, 140 pp.
- United Nations Environment Programme – Nairobi Convention Secretariat, 2019. Marine Protected Areas Outlook
- Project document of the ‘Western Indian Ocean Large Marine Ecosystems Strategic Action Programme Policy Harmonization and Institutional Reforms’ (SAPPHIRE)