Take advantage of the search to browse through the World Heritage Centre information.

i
ii
iii
iv
v
vi
vii
viii
ix
x

Komodo National Park

Indonesia
Factors affecting the property in 2023*
  • Identity, social cohesion, changes in local population and community
  • Impacts of tourism / visitor / recreation
  • Management systems/ management plan
Factors* affecting the property identified in previous reports
  • Impacts of tourism / visitor / recreation
  • Management systems / management plan
  • Identity, social cohesion, changes in local population and community
  • Fire (wildfires) (issue resolved)
  • Illegal activities (Deer poaching; coral blasting; illegal dynamite and cyanide fishing) (issues resolved)
UNESCO Extra-Budgetary Funds until 2023

N/A

International Assistance: requests for the property until 2023
Requests approved: 3 (from 1993-1995)
Total amount approved : 119,500 USD
Missions to the property until 2023**

September 2000: joint UNESCO/IUCN mission; January – February 2002: joint UNESCO-UNEP-RARE Center for Tropical Conservation mission; March 2022: joint World Heritage Centre/IUCN Reactive Monitoring mission

Conservation issues presented to the World Heritage Committee in 2023

On 31 January 2022, the State Party submitted a state of conservation report and an update on 16 March 2023, which are available at https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/609/documents and report the following:

  • A draft of the Integrated Tourism Master Plan for Komodo National Park (KNP) and Labuan Bajo Flores (ITMP) to “guide [a] sustainable future for tourism” had been expected in July 2022. It aims to attain the target of 500,000 foreign and 1.5 million domestic tourists within a 4-year period (2016-2019), whilst ensuring that neither tourism nor development in the property will have a negative impact on the Outstanding Universal Value (OUV). It is reported to include a robust tourism management plan that is based on a 2018 carrying capacity study by the Ministry of Environment and Forestry (MOEF) and ensures the distribution of tourists across more than 100 sites outside the property including Flores island (in the wider setting of the property). The intention is to shift away from mass tourism and focus on sustainable “high-end” tourism and improved infrastructure to boost the local economy and stimulate community development. The State Party will collaborate with IUCN experts to ensure that no actions will have a negative impact on the OUV;
  • Following finalization of the ITMP, a Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) will be undertaken to ensure that any development proposed under the ITMP will not negatively impact the OUV. A tourism carrying capacity policy is implemented;
  • There is no intention to relocate local people from Komodo Village. A community-based ecotourism programme is being developed, highlighting local community involvement and based on the traditions and cultures of Komodo Island;
  • The revision of the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for the Loh Buaya tourism infrastructure project on Rinca Island to align with the IUCN World Heritage Advice Note on Environmental Assessment, and the development of an Environmental Management Plan (EMP) was completed and appended to the report. The project is a renovation and expansion of existing park infrastructure required to sustainably accommodate growing tourism numbers and manage human-wildlife interactions, estimated to accommodate approximately 1,000 visitors per day. The EIA concludes no or negligible impacts on the OUV;
  • Since August 2021, an online registration platform has been developed to better manage growing tourism at two sites (Gili Lawa Resort and Padar Selatan Resort) and quota limits are being considered in line with carrying capacity;
  • The Komodo dragon population in KNP has remained relatively stable over the last 5 years. Long term monitoring and research continues through mark-recapture, camera traps and tagging in collaboration with the Komodo Survival Programme (KSP);
  • Protection and surveillance efforts for the marine environment continue in collaboration with national and regional law enforcement agencies. The rate of infringements, specifically poaching and illegal fishing, has significantly decreased compared to previous years. Various coral transplantation and reef check activities were undertaken between 2019-2021. The 2020 Outline for the Future Marine Management of the Komodo National Park World Heritage Site provides recommendations for marine management:
  • Five concessions have been issued to three private tourism companies within the utilisation zones in KNP (2014, 2015 and 2020 respectively), each for a period of 55 years and requiring a 55-year management plan (RRPA), 5-year management plan (RKL) and 1-year management plan (RKT). Tourism facilities proposed across various locations include, for example, guest houses, a cafeteria, viewing deck, swimming pools, and staff accommodation.

On 9 August 2021, the World Heritage Centre sent a letter to the State Party requesting to verify third party information regarding tourism infrastructure development on Rinca Island, recalling the Committee’s request in Decision 44 COM 7B.93 to revise the related EIA in line with the IUCN World Heritage Advice Note on Environmental Assessment and to resubmit this to the World Heritage Centre for review by IUCN as a matter of urgency.

On 1 to 7 March 2022, a joint World Heritage Centre/IUCN Reactive Monitoring mission visited the property. The report is available at https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/609/documents.

On 23 February 2023, the World Heritage Centre sent a letter to the State Party, conveying third-party information regarding a potential increase in the entry fees to KNP and requesting an update to the State Party on this matter. The State Party responded on 28 March 2023 confirming that there is no increase of the entrance fee.

On 24 March 2023, the State Party submitted to the World Heritage Centre an updated map and cartographic information on the property, which are under review by the World Heritage Centre.

Analysis and Conclusion by World Heritage Centre and the Advisory Bodies in 2023

The prioritisation of KNP and the Labuan Bajo Flores region by the President of Indonesia as one of five high-priority tourism destinations in Indonesia provides an opportunity for the State Party to position the property as a leading sustainable tourism destination that is based on high-quality visitor experience which ensures the protection and management of the OUV. In this regard, the State Party’s confirmation that it is moving away from mass tourism is noted. However, noting the projected significant increase in visitor numbers and the plans to expand tourism developments within KNP including through the five private concessions, it will be important for the State Party to ensure a strategic and precautionary approach to tourism development that focuses on sustainable high-quality visitor experience that ensures the protection of the OUV and avoids any negative impact on it.

The draft ITMP provides an overarching framework for tourism management for the property and its wider setting and it is recommended to finalise this in line with international best practice standards and the recommendations of the 2022 Reactive Monitoring mission, focusing on the protection of the OUV.

In response to the third-party concerns transmitted by the World Heritage Centre to the State Party in 2021 regarding reported changes to the zoning system of the property in 2020 to reduce wilderness areas and facilitate development, the State Party informed the mission that no substantive changes were made to the zoning system in 2020. However, regarding the changes that took place in the 2012 decree which the World Heritage Centre was not informed of by the State Party, the transformation of wilderness zones into utilization zones is of concern, given that this change appears to have been implemented without a review of the potential impacts on the OUV. It is recommended that a study is implemented to review if the current zoning and resulting tourism development is adequate to ensure the protection status and the OUV of the property.

Specifically regarding tourism development projects within the property, it is important that any proposed developments are first assessed for their potential impact on the OUV of the property, prior to any approvals being issued. In this regard, the 2020 Ministerial decree which exempts tourism infrastructure within KNP from EIA requirements is a particular concern, especially given that several private tourism concessions have been issued with plans for future development, and that KNP and Labuan Bajo are prioritised more broadly for tourism development. It is therefore positive that the authorities confirmed during the mission that EIAs will be required going forward and that an SEA will be undertaken following completion of the ITMP. An SEA allows the State Party to take an informed strategic decision regarding tourism development beyond individual projects and in the specific context of the World Heritage values. It is recommended that an SEA is completed prior to the approval of individual projects, and that proposals for projects located within the property or its wider setting are assessed for their potential impact on the OUV in line with the new Guidance and Toolkit for Impact Assessments in a World Heritage Context, which replaced the IUCN Advice Note in 2022, prior to considering any approval of individual projects including private tourism concessions. The World Heritage Centre and the Advisory Bodies are available to provide training on the new Guidance.

Recalling third party concerns that the Loh Buaya project on Rinca Island was presented as a mass tourism project, it is noted that it is an upgrade and extension of an existing ranger post and ecotourism facility publicly managed by the KNP Authority, which aims to address increasing tourism pressure on the OUV. This was expected to open in mid-2022. Noting that construction of the project continued during the revision of the EIA that was requested by the Committee, it is important to recall that impact assessments must be undertaken prior to any approval or construction processes in order to effectively inform decision making, and not retrospectively. The State Party’s efforts to revise the initial EIA are noted, which concluded that there would be no significant impact on the OUV. It is recommended that the State Party ensure sufficient monitoring and management measures are in place, including through implementation of the EMP, to effectively protect and manage the OUV and avoid any potential future negative impacts that may result from increasing visitation, such as increased tourism pressure.

Recalling that in 2021 the status of the Komodo dragon moved from Vulnerable to Endangered on the IUCN Red List due to impact of climate change and habitat loss from ongoing human activities, it is positive that monitoring and research indicates a stable population trend for the KNP subpopulation and its associated prey over the last 5 years. It is recommended that monitoring and management is continued in collaboration with the KSP and researchers. It will be important that the planned tourism expansion in the property and wider region fundamentally ensures the protection and management of, and does not negatively impact on, the species including its natural behaviour and ecosystem.

The State Party’s confirmation that there will be no relocation of local communities from any protected area, and the intention to develop community-based ecotourism, is positive. Considering the various third-party concerns received by the World Heritage Centre and IUCN in recent years regarding local livelihoods in the context of tourism development (e.g., the removal of local communities or the potential increase in entry fees on Komodo Island for exclusive access), it is important that the State Party ensures the appropriate engagement of local communities in decision-making processes in line with international best-practice policies. Tourism development should be focused on high-quality experience tourism that includes providing opportunities and benefits for the local communities.

Recalling the importance of the marine ecosystem, the reported significant reduction in poaching and illegal fishing due to ongoing surveillance efforts is positive, although details were not provided. Whilst individual marine monitoring activities, e.g., coral transplantation and Reef Check surveys, have been undertaken in recent years, the capacity for the KNP Authority to implement a consolidated marine monitoring and management programme for the property appears to be limited and require further capacity. It is recommended the State Party further strengthen marine monitoring and management capacity, taking into consideration the mission recommendations and the previous 2020 UNESCO report Outline for the Future Marine Management of the Komodo National Park World Heritage Site.

The submission of a new map and cartographic information of the property by the State Party for boundary clarification is welcomed, and it is recommended that the State Party continue engaging with the World Heritage Centre to clarify the boundaries of the property, as also recommended by the 2022 Reactive Monitoring mission.

Decisions adopted by the Committee in 2023
45 COM 7B.15
Komodo National Park (Indonesia) (N 609)

The World Heritage Committee,

  1. Having examined Document WHC/23/45.COM/7B.Add.2,
  2. Recalling Decision 44 COM 7B.93 adopted at its extended 44th session (Fuzhou/online, 2021),
  3. Considers that the identification of Komodo National Park (KNP) as one of five high-priority tourism destinations in Indonesia, the State Party’s intention to shift away from mass tourism, and the development of an Integrated Tourism Master Plan for Komodo National Park and Labuan Bajo Flores (ITMP), present a positive opportunity to position the property as a leading sustainable tourism destination that ensures the protection and management of the Outstanding Universal Value (OUV);
  4. Noting however the planned expansion of tourism in KNP and the wider Labuan Bajo region, including a projected significant increase in visitor numbers and allocation of private concessions within the property, and noting with concern the 2020 Ministerial decree exempting tourism infrastructure within KNP from Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) requirements, notes with appreciation the State Party’s confirmation that a Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) and EIAs for individual projects will be undertaken, and also requests the State Party to:
    1. Take a strategic and precautionary management approach to tourism development that is focused on sustainable high-quality visitor experience, as opposed to exclusivity,
    2. Conduct an SEA of tourism development within the property and its wider setting prior to the approval of individual projects, including private tourism concessions, in line with the 2022 mission recommendation,
    3. Ensure that all proposed development projects are appropriately assessed for their potential impact on the OUV in line with the Guidance and Toolkit on Impact Assessments in a World Heritage Context, prior to making any decision that would be difficult to reverse, including undertaking consultations with relevant rightsholders and stakeholders prior to the approval and construction of a project,
    4. Ensure that no concessions or development projects are approved without an appropriate assessment and that no approval is issued for projects that would have a negative impact on the OUV;
  5. Takes note of the revision of the EIA for the Loh Buaya Resort (Rinca Island) and requests furthermore the State Party to ensure proactive monitoring and management measures are in place, including through implementation of the Environmental Management Plan (EMP), to effectively protect and manage the OUV and avoid any potential future negative impacts that may result from increasing visitation, such as increased tourism pressure, especially on the Komodo dragon population;
  6. Expresses concern about the changes to the zoning plan of the property that took place in 2012, which the World Heritage Centre was not informed of by the State Party and which resulted in the transformation of wilderness zones into utilization zones that allow for tourism development, and requests the State Party to review whether the current zoning and resulting tourism development is adequate to ensure the protection status and the OUV of the property and submit the results to the World Heritage Centre;
  7. Recalling that in 2021 the status of the Komodo dragon moved from Vulnerable to Endangered on the IUCN Red List due to the impact of climate change and habitat loss from ongoing human activities, notes with appreciation that monitoring activities report a stable population trend in KNP, and requests moreover the State Party to continue regular population monitoring and implement management measures that ensure the long-term protection of the species, especially in the context of tourism expansion;
  8. Noting with appreciation the reported significant reduction in poaching and illegal fishing, reiterates its concern regarding the lack of operational equipment and technical capacity to manage the property’s marine area, and reiterates its request for the State Party to urgently strengthen marine management and law enforcement capacities in the property, with a specific emphasis on controlling illegal fishing activities and boat anchoring, and to allocate a sufficient budget for marine research, monitoring, education and compliance with marine regulations;
  9. Requests furthermore the State Party to implement the recommendations of the 2022 joint World Heritage Centre/IUCN Reactive Monitoring mission, including to:
    1. Provide training and capacity building to key stakeholders on impact assessment processes to support planning and decisionmaking for the protection and management of the property,
    2. Ensure a proactive and strategic management approach to tourism development under the ITMP which includes an assessment of the carrying capacity for the property, prior to approving any major tourism developments,
    3. Ensure the engagement of local communities in decision-making processes in line with international best-practice policies, including tourism development,
    4. Finalize the ITMP to enable the State Party to provide best practice guidance to stakeholders for future tourism development that ensures the protection of OUV, support local livelihoods, and provide business and economic opportunities from conservation and includes actions to combat climate change,
    5. Implement the necessary management and monitoring measures to ensure the longterm protection of the Komodo dragon, its prey species, and important habitats, including to effectively plan, monitor and manage key pressures, such as poaching and the projected increase in tourism, including through the ITMP,
    6. Strengthen marine monitoring and management measures for the property, including ensuring the effective regulation of the liveaboard (LOB) and cruise tourism industry, establishing a systematic and transparent revenue capture mechanism to return income to the property, and incorporate a marine monitoring programme into the core management of the property,
    7. Explore the potential for utilizing the multi-stakeholder Komodo Biosphere Reserve Coordinating Forum as a mechanism to support the management of the World Heritage property,
    8. Clarify the boundaries of the property, and specifically the status of the three reserves (Wae Wuul Nature Reserve, the Mburak Forest, and the Mbeliling and Nggorang Protected Forests) located on Flores island, in consultation with the World Heritage Centre;
  10. Finally requests the State Party to submit to the World Heritage Centre, by 1 December 2024, an updated report on the state of conservation of the property and the implementation of the above, for examination by the World Heritage Committee at its 47th session.
Draft Decision: 45 COM 7B.15

The World Heritage Committee,

  1. Having examined Document WHC/23/45.COM/7B.Add.2,
  2. Recalling Decision 44 COM 7B.93, adopted at its extended 44th session (Fuzhou/online, 2021),
  3. Considers that the identification of Komodo National Park (KNP) as one of five high-priority tourism destinations in Indonesia, the State Party’s intention to shift away from mass tourism, and the development of an Integrated Tourism Master Plan for Komodo National Park and Labuan Bajo Flores (ITMP), present a positive opportunity to position the property as a leading sustainable tourism destination that ensures the protection and management of the Outstanding Universal Value (OUV);
  4. Noting however the planned expansion of tourism in KNP and the wider Labuan Bajo region, including a projected significant increase in visitor numbers and allocation of private concessions within the property, and noting with concern the 2020 Ministerial decree exempting tourism infrastructure within KNP from Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) requirements, notes with appreciation the State Party’s confirmation that a Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) and EIAs for individual projects will be undertaken, and also requests the State Party to:
    1. Take a strategic and precautionary management approach to tourism development that is focused on sustainable high-quality visitor experience, as opposed to exclusivity,
    2. Conduct an SEA of tourism development within the property and its wider setting prior to the approval of individual projects, including private tourism concessions, in line with the 2022 mission recommendation,
    3. Ensure that all proposed development projects are appropriately assessed for their potential impact on the OUV in line with the Guidance and Toolkit on Impact Assessments in a World Heritage Context, prior to making any decision that would be difficult to reverse, including undertaking consultations with relevant rightsholders and stakeholders prior to the approval and construction of a project,
    4. Ensure that no concessions or development projects are approved without an appropriate assessment and that no approval is issued for projects that would have a negative impact on the OUV;
  5. Takes note of the revision of the EIA for the Loh Buaya Resort (Rinca Island) and requests furthermore the State Party to ensure proactive monitoring and management measures are in place, including through implementation of the Environmental Management Plan (EMP), to effectively protect and manage the OUV and avoid any potential future negative impacts that may result from increasing visitation, such as increased tourism pressure, especially on the Komodo dragon population;
  6. Expresses concern about the changes to the zoning plan of the property that took place in 2012, which the World Heritage Centre was not informed of by the State Party and which resulted in the transformation of wilderness zones into utilization zones that allow for tourism development, and requests the State Party to review whether the current zoning and resulting tourism development is adequate to ensure the protection status and the OUV of the property and submit the results to the World Heritage Centre;
  7. Recalling that in 2021 the status of the Komodo dragon moved from Vulnerable to Endangered on the IUCN Red List due to the impact of climate change and habitat loss from ongoing human activities, notes with appreciation that monitoring activities report a stable population trend in KNP, and requests moreover the State Party to continue regular population monitoring and implement management measures that ensure the long-term protection of the species, especially in the context of tourism expansion;
  8. Noting with appreciation the reported significant reduction in poaching and illegal fishing, reiterates its concern regarding the lack of operational equipment and technical capacity to manage the property’s marine area, and reiterates its request for the State Party to urgently strengthen marine management and law enforcement capacities in the property, with a specific emphasis on controlling illegal fishing activities and boat anchoring, and to allocate a sufficient budget for marine research, monitoring, education and compliance with marine regulations;
  9. Requests furthermore the State Party to implement the recommendations of the 2022 joint World Heritage Centre/IUCN Reactive Monitoring mission, including to:
    1. Provide training and capacity building to key stakeholders on impact assessment processes to support planning and decision‐making for the protection and management of the property,
    2. Ensure a proactive and strategic management approach to tourism development under the ITMP which includes an assessment of the carrying capacity for the property, prior to approving any major tourism developments,
    3. Ensure the engagement of local communities in decision-making processes in line with international best-practice policies, including tourism development,
    4. Finalize the ITMP to enable the State Party to provide best practice guidance to stakeholders for future tourism development that ensures the protection of OUV, support local livelihoods, and provide business and economic opportunities from conservation and includes actions to combat climate change,
    5. Implement the necessary management and monitoring measures to ensure the long‐term protection of the Komodo dragon, its prey species, and important habitats, including to effectively plan, monitor and manage key pressures, such as poaching and the projected increase in tourism, including through the ITMP,
    6. Strengthen marine monitoring and management measures for the property, including ensuring the effective regulation of the liveaboard (LOB) and cruise tourism industry, establishing a systematic and transparent revenue capture mechanism to return income to the property, and incorporate a marine monitoring programme into the core management of the property,
    7. Explore the potential for utilizing the multi-stakeholder Komodo Biosphere Reserve Coordinating Forum as a mechanism to support the management of the World Heritage property,
    8. Clarify the boundaries of the property, and specifically the status of the three reserves (Wae Wuul Nature Reserve, the Mburak Forest, and the Mbeliling and Nggorang Protected Forests) located on Flores island, in consultation with the World Heritage Centre;
  10. Finally requests the State Party to submit to the World Heritage Centre, by 1 December 2024, an updated report on the state of conservation of the property and the implementation of the above, for examination by the World Heritage Committee at its 47th session.
Report year: 2023
Indonesia
Date of Inscription: 1991
Category: Natural
Criteria: (vii)(x)
Documents examined by the Committee
SOC Report by the State Party
Report (2023) .pdf
Report (2022) .pdf
Initialy proposed for examination in 2022
arrow_circle_right 45COM (2023)
Exports

* : The threats indicated are listed in alphabetical order; their order does not constitute a classification according to the importance of their impact on the property.
Furthermore, they are presented irrespective of the type of threat faced by the property, i.e. with specific and proven imminent danger (“ascertained danger”) or with threats which could have deleterious effects on the property’s Outstanding Universal Value (“potential danger”).

** : All mission reports are not always available electronically.


top