Arab Times

Nations gather to rescue ocean life

Stakes could hardly be higher: experts

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PARIS, March 27, (AFP): It took a decade to get to the negotiatin­g table, and it could easily take another to finish the job, but UN talks in New York to safeguard life in the high seas finally begin in earnest Monday.

The stakes could hardly be higher, experts and diplomats agree.

Oceans produce half the oxygen we breathe, regulate the weather, and provide humanity’s single largest source of protein.

Without them, Earth would be just another barren rock in the Universe.

And yet humanity has harvested marine species upon which we depend to the edge of extinction, and used the seas as a collective garbage dump.

Climate change, meanwhile, has altered the ocean’s basic chemistry in ways that raise the spectre of a mass extinction that scientists say is already underway.

Today, a patchwork of agreements and regulatory bodies govern shipping, fishing, and mineral extraction, while the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, negotiated in the 1970s, lays out rules for how far a nation’s zone of influence extends beyond its shores.

But in what may be the biggest le-

tion remains “very worrying,” he said.

Brazil has registered 1.5 million cases of Zika since detecting the outbreak last year. (AFP) gal loophole in history, geographic­ally speaking, there is no internatio­nal treaty protecting marine areas beyond national jurisdicti­on — that’s two-thirds of the surface of the oceans, and half the planet’s.

The result has been a kind of aquatic “Far West”, a case study for what has sometimes been called the tragedy of the commons.

Responsibi­lity

“Very early we decided that the high seas were for everybody and nobody, because everyone owns them and nobody takes responsibi­lity for them,” said Callum Roberts, a marine biologist at the University of York in England.

For most of human history, the vast expanse of open ocean was seen as a distance to travel across rather than a resource to exploit.

But a global population closing in on 10 billion, along with lethally efficient advances in technology, have created the will and the way to pillage marine flora and fauna as never before.

Currently, about 12 percent of the 90 million tonnes of fish harvested every year come from the high seas, but that percentage could climb quickly.

Zika-linked birth defect found:

French authoritie­s said Tuesday there was “a very strong suspicion” that the first case of microcepha­ly linked to the Zika virus had been detected on the Caribbean island

“On the high seas, anything goes,” said a European diplomat who will take part in the talks.

“The aim of this future agreement is precisely to set up a system of governance to constrain the impact of human activity,” he said, requesting anonymity.

The meeting Monday of the “preparator­y committee” is the first of four two-week sessions scheduled through the end of 2017.

That is when members of the United Nations will decide if they have a foundation for negotiatin­g a legally binding treaty which could — if the history of UN climate talks is any guide — take a long time.

Tackle

As with the two-decade wrangle over how to tackle global warming, which finally yielded a universal deal in December, a half-dozen key issues divide nations grouped in familiar blocs on how best to manage the high seas.

One is the scope of zones in which industrial fishing and mineral extraction would be curtailed or banned.

“Marine protected areas are one of the strongest tools for safeguardi­ng

of Martinique.

The case would be the first on French territory of microcepha­ly, a birth defect thought to be caused by Zika, the mosquito-borne virus that has spread rapidly nature and rebuilding fish stocks,” said Roberts.

Currently, just over three percent of oceans — all within national boundaries — are off limits to commercial exploitati­on. The UN Convention on Biodiversi­ty has called for a target of 10 percent by 2020.

But many experts cite the World Parks Congress 2014 recommenda­tion that fully 30 percent of oceans should be set aside as de facto internatio­nal parks. Even then, according to a study published last week in the journal Conservati­on Letters, it may not be enough. The loss of marine life is already so advanced that it would take larger areas to protect biodiversi­ty and prevent some fish stocks from collapsing.

Nations also disagree on what rules to set for exploiting marine genetic resources.

“Right now, there are no rules — it’s ‘first come, first serve’,” said Julien Rochette, a researcher at the Institute for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Relations in Paris.

Only three countries — the United States, Germany and Japan — hold 70 percent of patents stemming from marine life, he noted. through South America.

French Health Minister Marisol Touraine said a total of 130 pregnant women had been diagnosed with the Zika virus in the Antilles islands, which include Martinique, as well as French Guiana on the South American mainland.

“For one of them, we have elements that lead us to believe her baby has contracted microcepha­ly and that this microcepha­ly is directly linked to her infection with the Zika virus,” said Touraine. (AFP)

S. Korea registers Zika case:

South Korea on Tuesday reported the country’s first case of the Zika virus, a mosquitobo­rne disease that has been linked to birth defects and other health issues.

A 43-year-old man who recently returned from Brazil was diagnosed with the virus after suffering fever, muscle pain and rash, according to a statement from the state-run Centers for Disease Control & Prevention.

The tropical disease, which has become epidemic in Latin America and the Caribbean, usually causes a mild illness. But the World Health Organizati­on last month declared the explosive spread of Zika in the Americas to be a global emergency, due to its link to the spike in the number of babies born with abnormally small heads and the rise in a rare neurologic­al syndrome that can cause paralysis and death. (AP)

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