Vancouver Sun

THE PANDEMIC TSUNAMI

Global deals to save oceans were within reach ... then COVID-19 hit and all bets are off

- VIRGINIA GEWIN

Before 2020 became the year of COVID -19, it was set to be the “year of the oceans.”

With only a small portion of them protected by law or agreement, expectatio­ns were high that bold steps to preserve biodiversi­ty, rein in overfishin­g and bolster social responsibi­lity were within reach. Then the coronaviru­s arrived, and high-profile meetings from the High Seas Treaty (the first global agreement to police and manage internatio­nal waters) to the United Nations Climate Change Conference were postponed.

The oceans are critical to any effort to slow global warming. Delay in global agreements, given how little time is left to avoid catastroph­e, has made matters only that much more desperate.

Waters more than 200 nautical miles from national shores are of critical importance to fisheries and climate mitigation. The Global Ocean Commission estimates the high seas account for up to US$16 billion in annual gross catch and between $74 billion and $222 billion in annual carbon storage.

As the world struggles to cut emissions to zero by 2050 — a goal scientists say is required to avoid massive planetary shifts — the ocean’s ability to store CO2 will increasing­ly diminish, according to new research published last week in the journal AGU Advances.

The push for marine stewardshi­p and new accords got a boost last year, when scientists confirmed that oceans have absorbed almost one-third of the CO2 humans generated — and that any extra CO2 they absorb will come with immense costs, to ocean life and the environmen­t.

“The ocean is warmer, more acidic, less productive, and rising,” said Justin Kenney, a senior adviser for climate, energy and environmen­t with the UN Foundation. “Work on the high seas, biodiversi­ty, and climate change — it’s all connected.”

The high seas are also largely lawless. Covering two-thirds of the Earth’s surface, they are subject to a patchwork of agreements that largely fail to conserve biodiversi­ty, said Sophie Mirgaux, Belgium’s special envoy for the ocean.

Years of meetings and complex negotiatio­ns critical to finalizing the High Seas Treaty were coming to a head this spring. After three Biodiversi­ty Beyond National Jurisdicti­on (BBNJ) meetings since September 2018, just three issues remained to be resolved: equitable commercial­ization and conservati­on of marine genetic resources; designatio­n of marine protected areas; and how to conduct environmen­tal impact assessment­s for deep sea mining. The fourth meeting, which was originally scheduled for late March in New York City, has been postponed until early 2021. Mirgaux and her internatio­nal counterpar­ts are continuing negotiatio­ns remotely to finalize treaty language on these topics.

“We have to maintain a sense of urgency, and not let (this effort) blow away with the wind,” she said.

Their task has been made more difficult, since three other high profile meetings that aimed to map a strategic future for oceans — the UN Ocean Conference, the Convention on Biological Diversity COP15 and the UN Climate COP26 — were postponed until 2021.

“There is a real concern we’ll lose momentum, which we don’t get very often on ocean issues,” Kenney said.

The pandemic may exacerbate an already dire situation. Illegal and unreported fishing may be getting worse as in-person monitoring on vessels and at port has been curtailed, said David Balton, former U.S. ambassador for oceans and fisheries and a senior fellow at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, D.C.

“Industry isn’t taking a break,” said Erik Giercksky, Head of Sustainabl­e Ocean Business at UN Global Compact, an initiative that encourages businesses to adopt sustainabl­e policies.

If anything, he said, COVID-19 demonstrat­es the need for strong global collaborat­ion to tackle these urgent issues, and temper the nationalis­tic forces that have stymied multilater­al discussion­s to grow sustainabl­e ocean businesses

— including seafood traceabili­ty, improved labour rights and zero-emission ocean shipping.

The shipping industry has set an ambitious target to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 50 per cent in 2050.

“The next two years are critical because there are 50,000 vessels, with lifetimes of 20-25 years, and we need to make changes to meet our 2050 ambitions,” said Melanie Moore, head of sustainabi­lity at Wilhelmsen, the global shipper based in Norway.

The global industry needs both government commitment­s and oversight to develop not just alternativ­e fuels, but the regulation­s and infrastruc­ture for the eventual transition, she said.

In a display of that commitment, the European Union recently published a plan to protect 30 per cent of European land and seas by 2030 — an important first step toward a global goal for oceans set by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature. That target took an almost immediate hit June 5 when U.S. President Donald Trump issued an executive order reopening the only marine protected area in U.S. Atlantic waters to commercial fishing.

Former U.S. president Barack Obama created the 4,913-squaremile Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument in 2016.

 ?? LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? “The ocean is warmer, more acidic, less productive, and rising,” says Justin Kenney, a UN Foundation senior adviser for climate, energy and environmen­t.
LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES “The ocean is warmer, more acidic, less productive, and rising,” says Justin Kenney, a UN Foundation senior adviser for climate, energy and environmen­t.
 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? The oceans are critical to any effort to slow global warming. Delay in agreements has made matters more desperate.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES The oceans are critical to any effort to slow global warming. Delay in agreements has made matters more desperate.

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