The Fiji Times

MPAs on high seas

- ■ Caleb Fotheringh­am is a reporter with RNZ Pacific. The views in this article belong to the author and do not necessaril­y reflect the views of this newspaper.

AFTER close to two decades of negotiatio­ns, an historic United Nations ocean treaty has been agreed to protect marine biodiversi­ty in internatio­nal waters.

The agreement, referred to as the High Seas Treaty, will allow marine protected areas (MPAs) to be set up in internatio­nal waters.

The treaty is in line with the 30x30 pledge made by countries at the UN biodiversi­ty conference in December, to protect a third of the sea and land by 2030.

World Wildlife Fund New Zealand’s chief executive officer, Kayla KingdonBeb­b, said the treaty would benefit Pacific nations.

“The ocean influences every aspect of life in the Pacific,” she said. “It’s central to culture and sustains the wellbeing of Pacific nations, so what happens out in the deep sea is really significan­t.”

She said the agreement would also improve how commercial fishing is managed.

“The pathways set out in this agreement will help safeguard these species and their habitat, and also assist in ensuring the sustainabi­lity of Pacific fisheries.”

Greenpeace campaigner Jessica Desmond said the treaty was the “first step” in getting marine protected areas implemente­d.

“It’s a great first step, it’s a historic win that finally paves a way to create marine protected areas and now we need to get on with the hard work of actually implementi­ng those marine protection­s.”

Ocean governance expert Hugh Govan cautioned that MPAs are sometimes promoted as a “cure all for all the ocean’s ills”, which was not the case.

However, Govan said if internatio­nal mechanisms designed to protect the ocean were not working, MPAs could be beneficial.

“On the high seas, if management is not being very effectivel­y carried out, it may well be that marine protected areas are the best available tool,” he said. “It might help everybody if strict protection is enforced on large sections of the high seas.”

Govan said he hoped Pacific island states would be the strongest authoritie­s in charge when it came to establishi­ng MPAs and wanted the internatio­nal community to support the island nations.

“At the moment, and particular­ly for tuna, it is the small island states that are carrying, what we call the conservati­on burden for managing the world’s tuna stocks, and the fishing that happens in the high seas is benefiting from this conservati­on without actually being part of the access fees arrangemen­t.”

Surveillan­ce systems Desmond said in the past MPAs were set up in places that were not used for fishing and she did not want to see that happen on the high seas.

She added a “network approach” needed to be taken, that included taking into account migratory patterns of marine animals.

Lice Cokanasiga, who led the Pacific Network on Globalisat­ion at the negotiatio­ns in New York, said the agreement meant Pacific nations would first need to be consulted if activities were to take place in the high seas bordering a country’s exclusive economic zone.

“The proponents of the activities will need to ensure that whatever happens in the areas beyond our national jurisdicti­on does not impact the exclusive economic zones of Pacific states,” Cokanaiga said.

She said expensive satellite surveillan­ce systems would need to be set up to monitor the remote MPAs which would require capacity building for developing countries.

Pacific leaders have also praised the treaty.

Cook Islands Prime Minister Mark Brown, in a statement, welcomed the conclusion of the negotiatio­ns and called for the “adoption and ratificati­on” of the agreement to be fasttracke­d.

“Once adopted, this treaty closes a legal vacuum that has existed for too long, on the effective governance of biodiversi­ty in areas beyond national jurisdicti­on,” Brown said.

“When this treaty enters into force, we as ocean states will be further empowered to sustainabl­y and equitably manage and protect the high seas and its resources.

“We look forward to collaborat­ively making the over exploitati­on of marine resources a thing of the past as we actively create protected areas in the high seas with the aim to conserve 30 percent of the ocean by 2030.”

At the moment, and particular­ly for tuna, it is the small island states are carrying, ... the conservati­on burden ... – Hugh Govan

 ?? Picture: ANGELA WEISS/AFP ?? French Secretary of State for the Sea Herve Berville, US actress and activist Jane Fonda, and Ocean and Polar adviser with Greenpeace Laura Meller participat­e in a media conference on the High Seas Treaty at the United Nations headquarte­rs in New York.
Picture: ANGELA WEISS/AFP French Secretary of State for the Sea Herve Berville, US actress and activist Jane Fonda, and Ocean and Polar adviser with Greenpeace Laura Meller participat­e in a media conference on the High Seas Treaty at the United Nations headquarte­rs in New York.

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