The Borneo Post

Greenpeace calls for high seas protected area in Galapagos

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PUERTO AYORA, Ecuador: Greenpeace on Monday called for the creation of a high seas marine protected zone under a new UN treaty to secure a much wider area around Ecuador’s famous Galapagos archipelag­o.

The islands, whose unique fauna and flora inspired British scientist Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution, are home to one of the world’s largest marine protected areas, in the eastern Pacific Ocean.

But “just outside the Galapagos protected area, industrial fishing fleets continue to plunder the oceans. We must protect this area,” Ruth Ramos of the Greenpeace Protect the Oceans campaign said in a statement.

Greenpeace urged government­s to ratify the socalled High Seas Treaty adopted by United Nations member states last June to allow for the creation of an expanded protected area in internatio­nal waters, outside of any country’s jurisdicti­on.

“This historic treaty, once ratified, will enable us to protect a vast area of internatio­nal waters near the Galapagos Islands, safeguardi­ng a vital migratory superhighw­ay for marine life such as sharks and turtles,” said Ramos.

The environmen­tal activist

group is carrying out a scientific expedition in the Galapagos, which is home to some 3,000 marine species like sea turtles, hammerhead sharks, sea lions and marine iguanas, to name a few.

The Galapagos islands, some 1,000 kilometers off the

mainland of Ecuador, have flora and fauna found nowhere else in the world.

Historic opportunit­y

The existing Galapagos marine reserve, a Unesco World Heritage site created in 1998, is “one of the best examples of

ocean protection in action. But it is still an exception in a world where only three percent of the ocean is currently fully or highly protected,” Ramos said earlier in the expedition.

The High Seas Treaty was adopted after more than 15 years of discussion­s to extend environmen­tal protection­s to internatio­nal waters which make up more than 60 percent of the world’s oceans.

It can go into effect 120 days after being ratified by 60 countries — a goal activists hope to reach by 2025.

So far it has been signed by several dozen states but ratified by only two: Palau and Chile.

Ramos said the government­s of Ecuador, Panama, Colombia and Costa Rica have taken ‘admirable steps’ to protect the oceans in their national waters.

Under the treaty, “they now have a historic opportunit­y to demonstrat­e global leadership by protecting this key area of the high seas and further safeguardi­ng the beauty and biodiversi­ty of the Galapagos region for future generation­s.”

Greenpeace said this could be the first marine protected area created since the treaty was adopted and “would remove the threat of industrial fishing fleets.”

“It would also protect a key area of ocean that many threatened migratory species from Galapagos and adjacent marine regions must cross in order to reach key coastal habitats for pupping, nesting and feeding.”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? A park ranger cares Galapagos land turtles at the giant tortoise breeding center in the Galapagos Nationa lPark, Santa Cruz island, Ecuador.
— AFP photo A park ranger cares Galapagos land turtles at the giant tortoise breeding center in the Galapagos Nationa lPark, Santa Cruz island, Ecuador.

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