The National - News

The world is squanderin­g the oceans

▶ Last week, we saw navies making whales go deaf and a precious reef in danger

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When British composer Ralph Vaughan Williams wrote his first symphony, he dedicated it to the sea. The choral piece has one of music’s most famous opening lines, a testament to the spectacula­r power oceans have always held over us: “Behold, the sea itself!”

Last week, people were beholding the seas, but for all the wrong reasons.

A diplomatic tussle was under way between the Australian government and Unesco as to whether the Great Barrier Reef, the world’s largest coral reef, should be put on the UN body’s list of endangered sites. Canberra argues that it is doing enough to protect the site, and that listing it would be premature and unnecessar­y.

On the other side of the world, Britain’s Royal Navy was facing accusation­s of detonating unexploded bombs in British waters, most of them from the German bombing campaigns of the Second World War. Despite the government having access to more environmen­tally friendly means of disposing them, the navy’s tactics are thought to be making marine life, particular­ly whales and dolphins, go deaf. For species that rely on hearing for navigation, the results are deadly.

And in what could not have been a more dramatic reminder of the need to do more to protect the world’s most important resource, a burst at an allegedly under-maintained gas pipeline in the Gulf of Mexico caused the remarkable phenomenon of an underwater fire. The situation was eventually brought under control five hours later.

While last week was particular­ly full of major news items, we have known about the precarious state of our oceans for some time. Less than three per cent of our seas are designated as protected and a quarter of its mammals are thought to be at some risk of extinction. The threat could be worse than currently anticipate­d. We still know remarkably little about oceans. While the sea covers more than 70 per cent of our planet’s surface, less than 20 per cent of it has been explored.

A rare certainty when it comes to oceans is the vital role they have played supporting humans. Fish remains the staple protein in the diets of one billion people, and yet the global community continues to dump eight million metric tonnes of plastic waste annually, which kills millions of specimens of marine life each year.

Our seas have always been capable of handling a healthy degree of resource extraction by humans. Today, 350 million people rely on them for employment. Even as global population­s rise, mankind can find a sustainabl­e way of taking food, precious metals and basing tourism around them. But to do this, today’s exploitati­ve free-for-all must stop. Not doing so would not only squander our most important resource, it would also endanger one of mankind’s major tools in fighting the challenges of the future.

An underwater fire might make for eye-catching footage, but it is indicative of a wider neglect that is, so far, going unchecked. Any attention given to the health of our seas is welcome, but if the internatio­nal community is to protect it in the long term, a deeper appreciati­on of its importance and vulnerabil­ity is needed.

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