- For over a year, journalists from Mongabay and Mongabay Latam have been digging into issues related to the Mesoamerican Reef, the Western Hemisphere’s largest barrier reef system, which runs from Mexico’s Yucatán through Belize and Guatemala to Honduras.
- As part of that effort, which involves exploring both problems and solutions, Mongabay founder Rhett Ayers Butler spoke to experts and reviewed many reports, scientific papers, and stories.
- With its early leadership and significant funding, Belize has emerged as a linchpin in Mesoamerican Reef conservation and fisheries management.
- This summary brings together what various experts have said—highlighting gaps, issues, and actionable recommendations as they relate to Belize.
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Belize sells itself as a small-country answer to a big problem: how to keep the sea alive and the people who depend on it working. The pitch is strong. A debt-for-nature “blue bond” shaved public debt and created a 20-year conservation finance stream. Targets for 30% ocean protection by 2026 are now embedded in policy. The press has been kind. So have donors. Yet beneath the awards and ribbon cuttings sits a harder question: do the reefs and fish show it? And are day-to-day rules on the water keeping pace with the promises on paper?
Start with the wins, because they’re significant. A case study from The Nature Conservancy documents the 2021 transaction that converted Belize’s “Superbond” into a blue loan backed by the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) cutting public debt by roughly 12% of GDP and earmarking about $180 million over two decades for marine conservation, alongside a government commitment to protect 30% of its waters by 2026. A new monitoring pilot, using a People-Planet-Prosperity (“3Ps”) framework for results-based finance, sets up a central system to track whether conservation and development targets are being met. In 2024, the government, WWF, WCS and Belize’s Development Finance Corporation launched a pilot credit facility at Glover’s Reef offering compliance-linked loans to licensed artisanal fishers. And in late 2024, Belize formalized new limits by expanding and re-gazetting protected zones at Lighthouse Reef Atoll, one of the crown jewels of the barrier reef system. Officials point to these as proof that Belize’s blue-economy architecture is not just policy, but practice. In the water, it’s murkier.
Zoom out to the ecosystem. The regional “report card” for the Mesoamerican Reef, issued by the Healthy Reefs for Healthy People Initiative, ticked up in 2024 after years of stagnation, helped by gains in herbivorous fish that mow down algae. But the overall grade remains “Poor,” with most of the 286 monitored sites still in poor or critical condition. Progress, yes; recovery, not yet.
2024 Mesoamerican Reef Report Card data for Belize from the Healthy Reefs for Healthy People Initiative
2024 Mesoamerican Reef Report Card data for Belize from the Healthy Reefs for Healthy People Initiative
What about the fish that pay school fees and put diesel in skiffs: lobster, conch, snappers, and groupers? Here the picture turns blotchy. Oceana’s inaugural “Belize Fisheries Audit” in 2021 gave credit for modern laws and gear bans, but flagged basic gaps: landings and effort data not “systematically collected and reported”, weak transparency around who can fish where, and insufficient information to set robust catch controls. The government’s Fisheries Department has since noted that digitization of licensing and logbook systems is underway, but results have yet to appear in public datasets. Those are not minor bookkeeping issues; they are the bedrock of stock assessment and enforcement.
Independent science since then has not eased concerns. Sea Around Us assessed 18 fish and invertebrate stocks and concluded that “most species are unsustainably fished”, with particular worry for conch and lobster, Belize’s export mainstays. The same analysis points to a 60% decline in groupers and snappers in regional monitoring, aligning with the sense from fishers that the big fish have become scarce.
One emblematic case carries more weight than a dozen talking points. At Glover’s Reef Marine Reserve, a peer-reviewed study published earlier this year found the isolated Nassau grouper population had collapsed despite two decades of spatial closures, seasonal bans, and size limits. Abundance at the spawning site is down 85%; densities across habitats have fallen to “virtually undetectable” levels. The study’s authors—drawing on fishery-dependent and independent data—warned of “impending extirpation”. That is a blunt verdict, and it lands within a UNESCO World Heritage complex celebrated for its management.
Policy design is not the only culprit. Implementation matters. Belize’s flagship “Managed Access” program—territorial use rights (TURFs) intended to curb the open-access race for fish—granted fishers privileges tied to specific zones. But a key lever has yet to be pulled: the number of active licenses within those zones has no formal cap. Officials counter that the registry system effectively controls entry, but researchers and co-managers note that overall license numbers continue to rise. In practice, pressure can ratchet up even as rules multiply. Ask a co-op buyer about the share of undersized conch arriving at the dock in a lean year, and you’ll hear a story about incentives: when prices are up and enforcement is thin, more juveniles get taken, according to a report from Sea Around Us. The science echoes that anecdote; multiple studies have flagged shrinking adult sizes and growing juvenile take for conch and lobster in parts of Belize’s grounds. Fishers have stressed that tight margins and fuel costs drive those choices—a reminder that enforcement must pair with economic alternatives.
Elkhorn corals. Photo by Henry Brown
The government’s view diverges. Officials argue that Belize is “well advanced” in small-scale fisheries management and that claims of crisis are “irresponsible” or based on unvalidated drafts. The Ministry of Blue Economy publicly rebutted headlines about fishers demanding changes and took “serious issue” with an independent assessment project, asserting that recent stock assessments show healthy recruitment and stable catches. Those assessments, according to officials, remain under technical review; as of late 2025, they have not been released publicly. The rhetoric is firm, the underlying data hard to find.
This is the crux of the reputational disconnect. On one side, an avalanche of conservation finance, new protected areas, and modern statutes. On the other, evidence that several high-value stocks are either overfished or flirting with it, that a marquee grouper could wink out at a reserve long held up as a model, and that core elements of rights-based management have not yet constrained entry or effort. Both can be true at once: institutions strengthening, ecosystems still eroding.
Belize is not unique. Reef fisheries worldwide struggle under multiple strains—warming seas, storms, disease, and the arithmetic of too many hooks. But the country’s promise, and the premium its brand now commands in global climate-biodiversity finance, bring a special duty to show the work. The IDB-backed MRV system is a good step, because donors and citizens should be able to see the line between dollars spent and biomass rebuilt, between legal text and changed practice on the water. Put simply: make the KPIs legible and public, tie disbursements to them, and keep the raw data open by default. The blue bond remains a landmark in conservation finance; the question now is more about performance, not principle.
Satellite imagery, like that shown here from Planet, allows for mapping of shallow coral reefs, such as on Lighthouse Reef Atoll in Belize. Photo courtesy of Planet Inc.
Two other fixes would bite quickly. First, align Managed Access with the intent of rights-based fisheries by limiting access where stocks warrant it. Cap licenses by zone, with transparent criteria and an appeal path, then phase in effort controls (traps, hooks, days at sea) where biomass trends don’t improve. The license cap point is not ideological—it appears explicitly in recent scientific appraisals as a missing piece. Second, reconcile enforcement with legitimacy. The rules must be even-handed, predictable, and seen to target the largest, most damaging offenses. If fishers believe enforcement focuses mainly on small operators while better-connected actors face lighter scrutiny, compliance will erode. Ensuring visible fairness matters as much as penalties.
None of this negates the value of protected areas or the blue bond. Lighthouse Reef’s new order, for instance, matters for habitat integrity and tourism as much as for fish. But reserves cannot be a refuge from governance; they have to be the place where governance is clearest. Publishing who can fish, where, and with what gear would answer a chunk of Oceana’s transparency critique and would let co-managers, NGOs, and co-ops reinforce—not replace—state capacity. Some NGOs working in co-management roles note that transparency on license data would strengthen, not undermine, their collaboration with government.
Corals and fish in Lighthouse Reef atoll, Belize. Image © Greg Asner.
The politics will be touchy. Belize’s marine NGOs often work under permits and MOUs that can be revoked, which breeds caution in public. Some nonetheless engage in discreet technical reform efforts, helping design monitoring tools or co-management plans even when they avoid public critique. Government ministries, under pressure to show blue-economy success, bridle at outside stock assessments that don’t neatly align. The quarrels spill into the papers, occasionally into court. But the sea is indifferent to communiqués. Fish respond to mortality and habitat, not framing.
A more grounded narrative is available, and may be more useful. It would admit that Belize’s conservation finance architecture is ahead of the curve, then match that architecture with plain-spoken diagnostics: which species are rebuilding under current rules, which are not, and why. It would show, with time-series data, that when licenses and effort are constrained in a zone, commercial biomass responds within a few years. Or, if it does not, that managers shift measures rather than defend the status quo. It would treat healthy herbivore trends as necessary but insufficient unless the commercial biomass index—the one that pays bills—returns to “Fair” or better across most sites.
Belize’s reputation was earned by trying things earlier than many peers: the gillnet ban, the early managed-access pilots, the embrace of global transparency on vessel tracking. The next step is less glamorous. It is housekeeping: data that are routine, licensing that is finite, enforcement that is even-handed, and stock-by-stock rebuilding plans with numbers the public can check. The country has the finance in place. Now it has to show, in the water and at the dock, that it works.
Marine conservation wins, and what’s missing (commentary)
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Marine conservation wins, and what’s missing (commentary)
See All Key Ideas
Belize sells itself as a small-country answer to a big problem: how to keep the sea alive and the people who depend on it working. The pitch is strong. A debt-for-nature “blue bond” shaved public debt and created a 20-year conservation finance stream. Targets for 30% ocean protection by 2026 are now embedded in policy. The press has been kind. So have donors. Yet beneath the awards and ribbon cuttings sits a harder question: do the reefs and fish show it? And are day-to-day rules on the water keeping pace with the promises on paper?
Start with the wins, because they’re significant. A case study from The Nature Conservancy documents the 2021 transaction that converted Belize’s “Superbond” into a blue loan backed by the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) cutting public debt by roughly 12% of GDP and earmarking about $180 million over two decades for marine conservation, alongside a government commitment to protect 30% of its waters by 2026. A new monitoring pilot, using a People-Planet-Prosperity (“3Ps”) framework for results-based finance, sets up a central system to track whether conservation and development targets are being met. In 2024, the government, WWF, WCS and Belize’s Development Finance Corporation launched a pilot credit facility at Glover’s Reef offering compliance-linked loans to licensed artisanal fishers. And in late 2024, Belize formalized new limits by expanding and re-gazetting protected zones at Lighthouse Reef Atoll, one of the crown jewels of the barrier reef system. Officials point to these as proof that Belize’s blue-economy architecture is not just policy, but practice. In the water, it’s murkier.
Zoom out to the ecosystem. The regional “report card” for the Mesoamerican Reef, issued by the Healthy Reefs for Healthy People Initiative, ticked up in 2024 after years of stagnation, helped by gains in herbivorous fish that mow down algae. But the overall grade remains “Poor,” with most of the 286 monitored sites still in poor or critical condition. Progress, yes; recovery, not yet.
2024 Mesoamerican Reef Report Card data for Belize from the Healthy Reefs for Healthy People Initiative
2024 Mesoamerican Reef Report Card data for Belize from the Healthy Reefs for Healthy People Initiative
What about the fish that pay school fees and put diesel in skiffs: lobster, conch, snappers, and groupers? Here the picture turns blotchy. Oceana’s inaugural “Belize Fisheries Audit” in 2021 gave credit for modern laws and gear bans, but flagged basic gaps: landings and effort data not “systematically collected and reported”, weak transparency around who can fish where, and insufficient information to set robust catch controls. The government’s Fisheries Department has since noted that digitization of licensing and logbook systems is underway, but results have yet to appear in public datasets. Those are not minor bookkeeping issues; they are the bedrock of stock assessment and enforcement.
Independent science since then has not eased concerns. Sea Around Us assessed 18 fish and invertebrate stocks and concluded that “most species are unsustainably fished”, with particular worry for conch and lobster, Belize’s export mainstays. The same analysis points to a 60% decline in groupers and snappers in regional monitoring, aligning with the sense from fishers that the big fish have become scarce.
One emblematic case carries more weight than a dozen talking points. At Glover’s Reef Marine Reserve, a peer-reviewed study published earlier this year found the isolated Nassau grouper population had collapsed despite two decades of spatial closures, seasonal bans, and size limits. Abundance at the spawning site is down 85%; densities across habitats have fallen to “virtually undetectable” levels. The study’s authors—drawing on fishery-dependent and independent data—warned of “impending extirpation”. That is a blunt verdict, and it lands within a UNESCO World Heritage complex celebrated for its management.
Policy design is not the only culprit. Implementation matters. Belize’s flagship “Managed Access” program—territorial use rights (TURFs) intended to curb the open-access race for fish—granted fishers privileges tied to specific zones. But a key lever has yet to be pulled: the number of active licenses within those zones has no formal cap. Officials counter that the registry system effectively controls entry, but researchers and co-managers note that overall license numbers continue to rise. In practice, pressure can ratchet up even as rules multiply. Ask a co-op buyer about the share of undersized conch arriving at the dock in a lean year, and you’ll hear a story about incentives: when prices are up and enforcement is thin, more juveniles get taken, according to a report from Sea Around Us. The science echoes that anecdote; multiple studies have flagged shrinking adult sizes and growing juvenile take for conch and lobster in parts of Belize’s grounds. Fishers have stressed that tight margins and fuel costs drive those choices—a reminder that enforcement must pair with economic alternatives.
Elkhorn corals. Photo by Henry Brown
The government’s view diverges. Officials argue that Belize is “well advanced” in small-scale fisheries management and that claims of crisis are “irresponsible” or based on unvalidated drafts. The Ministry of Blue Economy publicly rebutted headlines about fishers demanding changes and took “serious issue” with an independent assessment project, asserting that recent stock assessments show healthy recruitment and stable catches. Those assessments, according to officials, remain under technical review; as of late 2025, they have not been released publicly. The rhetoric is firm, the underlying data hard to find.
This is the crux of the reputational disconnect. On one side, an avalanche of conservation finance, new protected areas, and modern statutes. On the other, evidence that several high-value stocks are either overfished or flirting with it, that a marquee grouper could wink out at a reserve long held up as a model, and that core elements of rights-based management have not yet constrained entry or effort. Both can be true at once: institutions strengthening, ecosystems still eroding.
Belize is not unique. Reef fisheries worldwide struggle under multiple strains—warming seas, storms, disease, and the arithmetic of too many hooks. But the country’s promise, and the premium its brand now commands in global climate-biodiversity finance, bring a special duty to show the work. The IDB-backed MRV system is a good step, because donors and citizens should be able to see the line between dollars spent and biomass rebuilt, between legal text and changed practice on the water. Put simply: make the KPIs legible and public, tie disbursements to them, and keep the raw data open by default. The blue bond remains a landmark in conservation finance; the question now is more about performance, not principle.
Satellite imagery, like that shown here from Planet, allows for mapping of shallow coral reefs, such as on Lighthouse Reef Atoll in Belize. Photo courtesy of Planet Inc.
Two other fixes would bite quickly. First, align Managed Access with the intent of rights-based fisheries by limiting access where stocks warrant it. Cap licenses by zone, with transparent criteria and an appeal path, then phase in effort controls (traps, hooks, days at sea) where biomass trends don’t improve. The license cap point is not ideological—it appears explicitly in recent scientific appraisals as a missing piece. Second, reconcile enforcement with legitimacy. The rules must be even-handed, predictable, and seen to target the largest, most damaging offenses. If fishers believe enforcement focuses mainly on small operators while better-connected actors face lighter scrutiny, compliance will erode. Ensuring visible fairness matters as much as penalties.
None of this negates the value of protected areas or the blue bond. Lighthouse Reef’s new order, for instance, matters for habitat integrity and tourism as much as for fish. But reserves cannot be a refuge from governance; they have to be the place where governance is clearest. Publishing who can fish, where, and with what gear would answer a chunk of Oceana’s transparency critique and would let co-managers, NGOs, and co-ops reinforce—not replace—state capacity. Some NGOs working in co-management roles note that transparency on license data would strengthen, not undermine, their collaboration with government.
Corals and fish in Lighthouse Reef atoll, Belize. Image © Greg Asner.
The politics will be touchy. Belize’s marine NGOs often work under permits and MOUs that can be revoked, which breeds caution in public. Some nonetheless engage in discreet technical reform efforts, helping design monitoring tools or co-management plans even when they avoid public critique. Government ministries, under pressure to show blue-economy success, bridle at outside stock assessments that don’t neatly align. The quarrels spill into the papers, occasionally into court. But the sea is indifferent to communiqués. Fish respond to mortality and habitat, not framing.
A more grounded narrative is available, and may be more useful. It would admit that Belize’s conservation finance architecture is ahead of the curve, then match that architecture with plain-spoken diagnostics: which species are rebuilding under current rules, which are not, and why. It would show, with time-series data, that when licenses and effort are constrained in a zone, commercial biomass responds within a few years. Or, if it does not, that managers shift measures rather than defend the status quo. It would treat healthy herbivore trends as necessary but insufficient unless the commercial biomass index—the one that pays bills—returns to “Fair” or better across most sites.
Belize’s reputation was earned by trying things earlier than many peers: the gillnet ban, the early managed-access pilots, the embrace of global transparency on vessel tracking. The next step is less glamorous. It is housekeeping: data that are routine, licensing that is finite, enforcement that is even-handed, and stock-by-stock rebuilding plans with numbers the public can check. The country has the finance in place. Now it has to show, in the water and at the dock, that it works.
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