The Guardian (USA)

UN ocean treaty is ‘once in a lifetime’ chance to protect the high seas

- Karen McVeigh

The world has a “once in a lifetime” chance to protect the high seas from exploitati­on, warned scientists and environmen­talists, as negotiator­s meet at the UN headquarte­rs in New York this week to hammer out a new treaty on the oceans.

One scientist described the treaty, which will set out a legal framework to protect biodiversi­ty and govern the high seas, as the most significan­t ocean protection agreement for four decades.

“It’s extremely important it happens now,” said Prof Alex Rogers, science director of Rev Ocean, an ocean research NGO. “We’ve continued to see industrial­isation of areas beyond national boundaries, including distantwat­er fishing and potentiall­y deep-sea mining.”

A vast portion of the ocean, 64% by surface area, lies outwith the exclusive economic zones (EEZs) that cover approximat­ely 200 nautical miles from the shorelines of individual states. Referred to as the high seas, they host a wide array of ecosystems and species, many insufficie­ntly studied and recorded. The increasing reach of shipping vessels, seabed mining and new activities such as “bioprospec­ting” of marine species have put the high seas and its biodiversi­ty at increasing risk of exploitati­on.

A group of 50 countries has signed up to the 30x30 coalition, which launched in January 2021 and aims to protect 30% of the planet’s land and sea by 2030. But without an agreement, these much-heralded pledges will have no legal basis in the high seas.

Currently, all countries have the right to navigate, fish and carry out scientific research on the high seas with few restrictio­ns. Only 1.2% of this marine area is protected.

Jean-Baptiste Jouffray, a researcher at the Stockholm Resilience Centre at Stockholm University who has quantified the rise in human pressures on the marine environmen­t, describes a “blue accelerati­on”, or dash for resources, over the past two or three decades. “You have a race for the ocean in all these different sectors, but there is no overview.”

“One of the fallacies about the high seas is that you have this great big empty space. The other is that it is a quiet space. Both of those are untrue,” said Doug McCauley, associate professor of ocean science at the Benioff Ocean Initiative at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

“By all indicators it is busier that it has ever been. Shipping has increased by 1,600% since 1982, when Unclos [the UN law of the sea] was signed. Industrial fishing takes place farther and farther from shore and more than 55% of the ocean is fished. There is new interest in offshore oil and gas. And there is the threat of mining in the deep sea.”

McCauley contribute­d to a paper for the Pew Charitable Trusts highlighti­ng 10 biodiversi­ty hotspots in the high seas that would benefit from protection. They include the Costa Rica Dome – nutrient-rich waters that attract yellowfin tuna, migratory dolphins, endangered blue whales and leatherbac­k sea turtles – and the Emperor Seamount chain, which arches north-west of the Hawaiian islands towards Russia, a highly biodiverse series of seamounts.

The paper concludes that, while a patchwork of internatio­nal bodies and treaties manage resources and human activity in areas beyond national jurisdicti­on – including fishing, whaling, shipping and seabed mining – they vary greatly in their mandates, and their jurisdicti­ons often overlap. This piecemeal approach “leads to a degradatio­n of the environmen­t and its resources”, said the paper. It also makes setting up marine protected areas legally challengin­g.

“The treaty won’t create protection­s for hotspots but will hopefully create a structure so that we can create internatio­nal parks for the first time,” said McCauley. “It’s a starting place and a really important starting place.”

Peggy Kalas, of the High Seas Alliance, said: “After decades of negotiatio­ns and planning, the world has a once-in-a-generation chance to build meaningful protection­s for an environmen­t that supports life as we know it.

“It is hard to exaggerate how crucial these talks are for the multitrill­ion-dollar global ocean economy, a vital food source for billions of people and perhaps the best protection the planet has from climate change.”

However, NGOs expressed concern over being excluded from this week’s negotiatio­ns, after the UN restricted entry to delegates and intergover­nmental organisati­ons due to Covid.

Will McCallum, head of oceans at Greenpeace, which has long campaigned for a network of ocean sanctuarie­s, said it set a worrying precedent. “These negotiatio­ns are simply too important to avoid proper scrutiny; the UN should review its decision and allow civil society to participat­e in a safe and meaningful way.”

The UN general assembly voted on 24 December 2017 to convene a multiyear process to develop a treaty on “the conservati­on and sustainabl­e use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond national jurisdicti­on”.

Three of the scheduled negotiatio­ns have taken place. The fourth and final set, previously scheduled for March 2020 but postponed due to Covid, is now running from 7 to 18 March at the UN headquarte­rs in New York.

The draft treaty addresses four key areas: marine genetic resources; areabased management tools, including marine protected areas; environmen­tal impact assessment­s and capacity building; and the transfer of marine technology.

Last month, at the One Ocean summit in Brest, France, more than 100 countries, including the UK and 27 members of the EU, agreed to achieve a strong and robust UN high seas treaty, giving the talks a powerful political boost.

 ?? Photograph: Nadia Aly/Ocean Photograph­y Awards/ PA ?? Scientists say an agreement at the meeting in New York would allow for the creation of internatio­nal marine protected parks.
Photograph: Nadia Aly/Ocean Photograph­y Awards/ PA Scientists say an agreement at the meeting in New York would allow for the creation of internatio­nal marine protected parks.
 ?? Photograph: Cpl Amanda Mcerlich/AFP/Getty ?? A vessel involved in a high-seas standoff with the New Zealand navy in the Southern Ocean after suspected poaching. The 64% of the ocean outside of national jurisdicti­ons is difficult to police.
Photograph: Cpl Amanda Mcerlich/AFP/Getty A vessel involved in a high-seas standoff with the New Zealand navy in the Southern Ocean after suspected poaching. The 64% of the ocean outside of national jurisdicti­ons is difficult to police.

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