The Phnom Penh Post

UN high seas treaty talks fail to get deal to protect oceans

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THE clock ran out on March 18 at UN talks to forge a legally binding treaty to protect open oceans beyond national jurisdicti­ons, with no schedule set for prolonging the discussion­s.

This fourth round of negotiatio­ns since 2018 – preceded by a decade of preliminar­y talks – was meant to create vast marine reserves to prevent biodiversi­ty loss, oversee industrial-scale fisheries and share out the “genetic resources” of the sea.

“We have not come to the end of our work,” said conference president Rena Lee, a diplomate from Singapore, noting that the Covid pandemic had caused major delays.

“I believe that with continued commitment, determinat­ion and dedication, we will be able to build bridges and close the remaining gaps,” she said at the end of the session on March 18.

It now rests with the UN General Assembly to give the green light for another round of talks.

“All efforts must be devoted in the coming months to secure this long-awaited treaty in 2022,” said Peggy Kalas, president of the High Seas Alliance, a coalition of more than forty major NGOs and the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN).

A so-called High Ambition Coalition of European Union nations and 13 other countries, including India, Australia, Canada and Britain, have endorsed the same goal.

Some nations and many environmen­tal groups have called for at least 30 percent of the world’s oceans to be granted protected status, a target also to be on the table at UN biodiversi­ty talks later this year.

Currently less that one per cent of open ocean enjoys that status, according to the High Seas Alliance.

Oceans produce half the oxygen we breathe, regulate the weather and provide humanity’s single largest source of protein.

But they are being pushed to the brink by human activities.

Carbon dioxide emissions and global warming drive devastatin­g marine heatwaves and acidificat­ion.

The UN’s climate science advisory body has projected that more than 99 per cent of shallow water corals will die if average global temperatur­es rise more than degrees above preindustr­ial levels.

“The oceans as a whole are becoming warmer, the salinity levels are increasing. There’s less oxygen for marine life,” said Liz Karan, an expert with The Pew Charitable Trusts.

Humans have also fished some marine species to the edge of extinction, and used the world’s waters as a garbage dump.

Today, a patchwork of agreements and regulatory bodies govern shipping, fishing, and mineral extraction, while the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, negotiated in the 1970s, lays out rules for how far a nation’s zone of influence extends beyond its shores.

But despite two decades of consultati­ons, there is still no treaty protecting internatio­nal waters beyond national jurisdicti­on, accounting for about two-thirds of the world’s oceans.

Another contentiou­s question is who gets a share of the benefits from the exploitati­on of what are known as “marine genetic resources”.

Poorer countries fear they will be sidelined as wealthier nations scour the seas for the next wonder ingredient­s for the pharmaceut­ical, chemical or cosmetic industries, and lock up the spoils in trademarks and patents.

Will McCallum, head of oceans for Greenpeace UK, said wrapping up a deal by the end of this was crucial.

The treaty covers the so-called high seas, which begin beyond national exclusive economic zones that extend 200 nautical miles (370km) from their shores.

 ?? AFP ?? A port operator worker unloads tuna at the internatio­nal terminal in the port of Manta, Ecuador, on March 11. Time ran out on Friday at UN talks to forge a legally binding treaty to protect open oceans beyond national jurisdicti­ons.
AFP A port operator worker unloads tuna at the internatio­nal terminal in the port of Manta, Ecuador, on March 11. Time ran out on Friday at UN talks to forge a legally binding treaty to protect open oceans beyond national jurisdicti­ons.

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