PALAWAN SEAS
A long-term photographic project by Katherine Jack
Jacques Cousteau called Palawan the last refuge – a spectacular archipelago of 1,780 islands in the far western
Philippines. Isolated between the Sulu Sea and the West Philippine Sea, it lies at the heart of the Coral Triangle, a
critically important bioregion with the highest marine biodiversity on our planet. In 1990 it was named a UNESCO
Biosphere Reserve, a model and a microcosm for figuring out human relationships with the natural world.
The story of the peoples of Palawan is intricately connected to the life of the seas; its coral-fringed islands were among
the first in South East Asia to be settled by humans around 50,000 years ago. The indigenous peoples of Palawan have
always lived in keeping with the tides and the moon, the monsoon winds and rains. Nature has defined every aspect of
their existence, from the practical to the spiritual.
In recent years, the strains of a modern world have taken their toll. Industrial fishing and pollution are destroying ocean
ecosystems. Climate change threatens coral reefs with extinction within our lifetime. Palawan is rapidly developing; with
just 35,000 inhabitants at the turn of the Twentieth Century, it is now home to over a million people.
But there are movements to protect the archipelago’s extraordinarily rich natural resources. Palawan has become home
to a growing number of environmental groups working on the conservation and rehabilitation of marine and coastal
ecosystems.
Palawan Seas is a long-term photographic project that captures the inter-relationships that have long defined life in
Palawan. It is a unique visual narrative of a place and people on the verge of what may be irreversible change, but also a
story of collaborations and connection that seek to ensure a better future for Palawan and the planet.