Kuwait Times

Used and abused: Oceans key to fighting climate change

Humanity must heal oceans made sick by climate change

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PARIS: Humanity must heal oceans made sick by climate change and pollution to protect marine life and to save itself, experts warned days before the release of a major UN report. By absorbing a quarter of manmade CO2 and soaking up more than 90 percent of the heat generated by greenhouse gases, oceans keep the population alive - but at a terrible cost, according to a draft of the Intergover­nmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) assessment seen by AFP.

Seas have grown acidic, potentiall­y underminin­g their capacity to draw down CO2. Warmer surface water has expanded the force and range of deadly tropical storms. Marine heatwaves are wiping out coral reefs, and accelerati­ng the melt-off of glaciers and ice sheets driving sea level rise.

“The last book of the Bible talks about the four horseman of the Apocalypse,” said Dan Laffoley, strategic lead for ocean protection at the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature. “For the oceans, the lead horseman is surface warming,” he told AFP. “The three others are ocean heating, loss of oxygen and acidificat­ion.” There are at least three types of actions humans can take to help repair the damage and ensure that oceans don’t turn from friend to foe, scientists say.

Restoratio­n, Protection

Less than seven percent of oceans - which cover 70 percent of Earth’s surface - benefit from some form of regional or national protection, often with minimal enforcemen­t. Ocean advocates and experts say the area safeguarde­d must be vastly expanded. “We need to protect 30 percent of the ocean by 2030,” said Lisa Speer, director of the internatio­nal oceans program at the National Resources Defense Council in Washington DC. “This cannot be achieved without a high seas agreement,” she added. UN negotiatio­ns for a treaty to regulate exploitati­on of the high seas - waters beyond national jurisdicti­on covering nearly half the planet - began last fall, and could take years to complete.

At the same time, regions not included in marine parks or conservati­on areas “must be managed in a cautious and durable way,” Tom Dillon, Vice President of Pew Charitable Trust said. Restoring coastal mangroves and seagrass meadows, meanwhile, would draw down CO2 emissions, and shield coastal communitie­s from storm surges as a bonus. These “blue carbon” ecosystems could potentiall­y stock just under a billion tons of CO2 per year, about two percent of current emissions, according to the UN report.

Renewable energy

Off-shore and ocean-based renewable energy - including wind, wave, tidal, currents and solar - could meet a significan­t slice of future energy demand, numerous studies have shown. Such schemes are mostly experiment­al and thus costly per unit of energy generated, but economies-of-scale are possible. Floating wind farms, for example, fuelled by high wind speed over the open ocean could eventually generate more electricit­y than those on land, Carnegie Institutio­n for Science researcher­s reported in PNAS.

In winter, North Atlantic wind farms “could provide sufficient energy to meet all of civilizati­on’s current needs,” the authors said. “That’s a bit of fantasy, but it makes the point that these technologi­es have not been sufficient­ly developed,” said Jean-Pierre Gattuso, a senior scientist at France’s National Centre for Scientific Research. There are several ready to be scaled up, he said.

Geoenginee­ring

The failure of humanity to draw down planet-warming greenhouse gases - which continue to rise year-on-year has opened the door to other ideas once thought risky or far-fetched, such as injecting particles into the upper atmosphere to deflect the Sun’s radiation. Some geoenginee­ring schemes to cool Earth’s surface or reduce CO2 are ocean-based. One that has been tested with inconclusi­ve results involves sowing the open ocean with iron to create phytoplank­ton colonies that absorb CO2 as they photosynth­esise. When the tiny creatures die, they drag the CO2 into the inky depths.

Another scheme would brighten mirror-like marine clouds to reflect sunlight back into space. Spreading longlastin­g white foam across vast expanses of open water would - in theory - have the same effect. Scientists from Princeton and Beijing Normal University recently costed a plan to build an underwater barrier in front of an Antarctic glacier the size of England to help prevent warm ocean water from eroding its underbelly, thus preventing the glacier from slipping into the sea. The price tag was several hundred billion dollars.

 ?? — AFP ?? ALASKA: Tommy Swan (left) and Rhonda Norton take to the bank of a river as they hunt for caribou along the Wulik river in Kivalina, Alaska. The hunters in the village have seen the migration patterns of fish, caribou, seal and whale that they need for the long winter months change due to the warming weather.
— AFP ALASKA: Tommy Swan (left) and Rhonda Norton take to the bank of a river as they hunt for caribou along the Wulik river in Kivalina, Alaska. The hunters in the village have seen the migration patterns of fish, caribou, seal and whale that they need for the long winter months change due to the warming weather.

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