Jamaica Gleaner

Enforcemen­t vital to Jamaica’s ocean health commitment­s

- Petre Williams-Raynor Contributi­ng Editor pwr.gleaner@gmail.com

WITH THE ocean’s goods and services valued at up to US$21 trillion globally, a focus its health is more than the next big thing in developmen­t and requires the effective enforcemen­t of legislatio­n if it is to be preserved.

This appears to be the consensus among local stakeholde­rs, including scientists and civil society players, who reflected this past week on outcomes from the recent United Nations Ocean Conference and, in particular, on Jamaica’s own voluntary commitment­s.

The island’s commitment­s, as articulate­d by Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Minister Kamina Johnson Smith at the conference held in New York between June 5 and 9, and included on the UN Ocean Conference website are:

the expansion of maritime area declared as marine protected area (MPA) under national legislatio­n; and

Strengthen­ing national policy and legislativ­e frameworks governing protected areas, including MPAs.

On the first, marine biologist Dr Dayne Buddo, who participat­ed in the conference, said: “This is a good step. We need to be bold with this though, and increase those MPAs that are notake zones (fish sanctuarie­s).

“The situation is very bad for many years now, so a light superficia­l action will not work. We need to give the marine life a good chance to recover and provide the ecological services that we depend on. Protect more, and protect it now, with effective management,” he noted.

On the second, Buddo said it, too, is a good step, “especially if it means increasing fines and penalties for breaches. The laws are there, but enforcemen­t has been a real issue.”

Deputy chief executive officer (CEO) for the Jamaica Environmen­t Trust (JET), Suzanne Stanley, was in agreement on the need for enforcemen­t.

“As with any such commitment­s, it is about implementa- tion; not just saying you’re going to do something and putting it on paper, but actually

doing it. Too many things are committed to on paper and never implemente­d in a meaningful way,” she told The Gleaner.

JET’s CEO Diana McCaulay also weighed in on the need for enforcemen­t.

“The problem in Jamaica is largely a lack of enforcemen­t by the State, so even if marine protected areas were expanded and

policies and laws strengthen­ed, on current experience and crossing both administra­tions, there is entirely insufficie­nt enforcemen­t,” she said.

“JET has painstakin­gly documented these failures over more than two decades and there has been little improvemen­t. There simply is no real commitment at the political level to the environmen­tal laws in Jamaica,” she added.

Meanwhile, the value of oceans go well beyond its estimated contributi­on to global GDP “on the order of some US$1.5 to US$3 trillion annually, or roughly three to five per cent”, according to the 2016 World Bank report ‘Toward a Blue Economy: A Promise for Sustainabl­e Growth in the Caribbean’.

They extend, the report said, to “a number of tangible services provided by the ocean’s ecosystems ... for which markets do not exist, but yet are critical pieces of the global ocean economy — for example, carbon sequestrat­ion, coastal protection, waste disposal, and the existence of biodiversi­ty”.

Still, despite its tremendous value — including the response to climate change that threatens, among other things, more extreme weather events — the ocean is under significan­t stress.

“Overfishin­g costs the world about US$83 billion each year. Globally, 2,000,000 tonnes of sewage, agricultur­al and industrial wastes enter waterways daily. The volume of plastic in the ocean is projected to exceed the volume of fish by 2050. Surface layer of the ocean has become about 30 per cent more acidic (0.1 pH units) in the last century,” revealed Chris Corbin, programme officer for pollution and communicat­ions with UN Environmen­t Caribbean Environmen­t Programme, citing statistics from the UN Developmen­t Programme, the World Economic Forum 2016 and his own organisati­on.

“To sustain and explore new developmen­t opportunit­ies from oceans, we have to control impacts of climate change, habitat degradatio­n, overfishin­g and marine pollution,” he emphasised.

For him, in addition to enforcemen­t, effective communicat­ion and cooperatio­n are critical.

“In an era of social media and an overload of real and fake news, both communicat­ors and scientists need to work more closely together to ensure messages are accurate and effective,” he noted.

 ??  ?? Diana McCaulay
Diana McCaulay
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? Dr Dayne Buddo with Dr Sylvia Earle, marine biologist and world explorer, at the UN Ocean Conference in New York recently.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS Dr Dayne Buddo with Dr Sylvia Earle, marine biologist and world explorer, at the UN Ocean Conference in New York recently.
 ??  ?? Suzanne Stanley
Suzanne Stanley
 ??  ?? Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Minister Kamina Johnson Smith speaks at the UN Ocean Conference.
Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Minister Kamina Johnson Smith speaks at the UN Ocean Conference.

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