Vancouver Sun

Canada latest to sign watershed ocean treaty

- ROCHELLE BAKER Rochelle Baker is a Local Journalism Initiative reporter with Canada's National Observer. The Local Journalism Initiative is funded by the Government of Canada. Local Journalism Initiative

Canada has signed the landmark High Seas Treaty on the first anniversar­y of the document's creation.

Fisheries Minister Lebouthill­ier signed the global ocean agreement at the United Nations last week.

Ocean conservati­on groups celebrated the signing but urged the Canadian government to act quickly to ratify the treaty aimed at protecting marine biodiversi­ty in shared internatio­nal waters.

The accord is the result of decades of work and provides a legally binding blueprint to create marine-protected areas in internatio­nal waters in a bid to conserve marine life and the fair, sustainabl­e use of ocean resources.

The agreement represents one of the first co-ordinated internatio­nal efforts to preserve the high seas, which make up two-thirds of the ocean but are inadequate­ly governed by a patchwork of agreements and agencies largely focused on resource extraction, like fishing or underwater mining.

Signing the agreement was an important step to meet Ottawa's national and internatio­nal biodiversi­ty promise to protect 30 per cent of oceans, waters and land by 2030, the federal government said in a statement.

Canada, a maritime nation with the longest coastline in the world, is proud to sign the treaty that reflects a co-ordinated approach to creating marine conservati­on areas, Lebouthill­ier said.

“People around the world rely on healthy oceans. They are the backbone of many economies, cultures and ecosystems,” she said.

Canada joins other nations pushing to protect marine life in shared ocean waters, said Susanna Fuller, Oceans North's vice-president of conservati­on and projects.

“Now the race is on to ratify it,” Fuller said.

Ocean conservati­on groups across the globe are pushing so the treaty can be finalized by the UN Ocean Conference in 2025.

The agreement will only be operationa­l after at least 60 countries sign and ratify the document, Fuller stressed.

Canada, like 88 other countries that have signed the treaty, must also pass domestic legislatio­n spelling out that it will abide by the treaty's terms.

To date, only Chile and the Pacific island nation of Palau have fully ratified the deal.

The ocean is badly stressed by biodiversi­ty loss and climate change, so getting the treaty formalized quickly is vital, Fuller said.

Canada's signature gives the treaty some extra momentum and the country can now leverage its global reputation of environmen­tal leadership by pushing it forward on the internatio­nal stage, she added.

“Canada has an important role to play in advancing the treaty and ensuring the ocean continues to sustain future generation­s,” Fuller said.

The sooner the treaty is signed, the sooner work can begin on a global network of ocean sanctuarie­s desperatel­y needed by threatened marine life, said Sarah King, lead for Greenpeace Canada's oceans and plastics campaign.

For countries to meet the global 30 by 30 promise, more than 11 million square kilometres of ocean must be protected every year, King said.

“We need to see more urgency to write this historic treaty into law,” she said.

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