The Governments of Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea have completed the 10th Joint Border Committee (JBC) Meeting in Noro, reaffirming their shared commitment to strengthening border governance, security cooperation and sovereignty.
The meeting, held on 02 March 2026, was co-chaired by Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and External Trade, Collin Beck, and PNG’s Secretary for the Department of Foreign Affairs, Kuike Job Numoi.
In his opening remarks, Beck highlighted progress since the 9th JBC, including the signing in September 2025 of the MOU on Combined Surveillance of the Common Maritime Border and the Agreement concerning the Administration of Special Areas.
“These milestones reflect our shared commitment to regional security, the rule of law, and the well-being of our border communities,” Beck said in a statement, emphasising that the focus must now shift to effective implementation and monitoring.
He further noted that “our borders are not merely lines of separation, but bridges of cooperation.”
On border arrangements, both Governments reaffirmed their commitment to resolving the outstanding 4km maritime gap under the 1989 Treaty on Sovereignty, Maritime, Seabed and Continental Boundaries.
Technical meetings will begin in April 2026, with both sides agreeing in principle to amended Treaty and Basic Agreement language ahead of a possible signing in August 2026.
Under security cooperation, the Committee reviewed implementation of the Combined Surveillance MOU and agreed that its execution should remain strictly bilateral, prioritising national resources and strengthening “homegrown” Melanesian capacity.
Police counterparts will meet ahead of the anticipated Prime Ministers’ Meeting in August 2026.
On border governance and immigration, both Parties agreed to institutionalise the Traditional Inhabitants Meeting and Joint Advisory Committee to strengthen community-government linkages.
Solomon Islands updated PNG on progress of the Western Border Post and Patrol Boat Base at Lofung, expected for handover in May 2026. The Police MOU will also be renewed.
Looking at priorities for 2026, the Committee noted that 75 percent of the technical work on the Ontong Java Plateau Extended Continental Shelf submission has been completed and agreed to finalise maritime boundary delimitations this year.
Both Governments also committed to concluding the revised Customs MOU by June 2026 and reviewing the Small Craft MOU to strengthen enforcement against unregulated vessels.
The meeting adopted the Joint Outcome Statement and agreed that a Special JBC Meeting will be held in Honiara in 2027, with the 11th JBC Meeting to convene in Milne Bay Province, PNG, in the final quarter of 2028.
The 10th JBC concluded with both Governments reaffirming their commitment to safeguarding sovereignty and strengthening cooperation along their shared maritime border.












