Global Times

UN Ocean Conference opens in Lisbon

World leaders call for mapping of seafloor by 2030, reduction of pollution

- Xinhua

A global drive to map 80 percent of the seabed by 2030 should be launched to protect the world’s oceans, United Nations ( UN) Secretary- General Antonio Guterres said on Monday.

Speaking at the opening of the 2022 UN Ocean Conference in Lisbon, Portugal, Guterres called on government­s around the world to “increase their ambition to recover the oceans.”

Pollution of all kinds must be reduced in order to protect “people whose lives depend on the sea from the impact of climate change,” he said in a statement.

New, climate- resilient coastal infrastruc­ture must be created, he added, and the maritime transport sector must commit to reducing carbon emissions to zero “by 2050.”

Portuguese President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa also called for the mapping of maritime territory, as well as more investment in environmen­tal education.

De Sousa said: “This Lisbon conference has to be not only a sign that there is room for peace, multilater­alism, dialogue, cooperatio­n, but also a sign that we are going to act faster.”

Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa Monday made a commitment to classify 30 percent of the national marine area by 2030, and to bring all national fishery stocks within sustainabl­e biological limits.

The Portuguese government “will continue to invest in the Air Center initiative, as a network of scientific collaborat­ion between countries and research institutes in areas such as space, observatio­n of the atmosphere, oceans, climate and energy,” Costa said.

“By the end of this year, we will create the United Nations Decade of Ocean Sciences for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t office,” he added.

Portugal will also “ensure that 100 percent of the maritime space under Portuguese sovereignt­y or jurisdicti­on is evaluated in good environmen­tal condition.”

Protecting the oceans is crucial to combating climate change, promoting biodiversi­ty and sustainabl­e developmen­t, and ensuring maritime safety and freedom of movement, Costa said.

“We need a global ocean agenda, focused on practical solutions, based on science and endowed with the necessary financial resources,” he added in a statement.

The United Nations Conference on the Oceans is taking place in Lisbon until Saturday, attended by heads of state and government from across the globe.

The meeting began on Monday with the nomination of the heads of state of Portugal and Kenya as presidents of the conference.

“We need a global ocean agenda, focused on practical solutions...”

Antonio Costa Portuguese Prime Minister

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