The Malta Business Weekly

European Union commits €300m for clean, healthy and safe oceans

The European Union makes 23 new commitment­s at the fifth edition of Our Ocean conference, in Bali, Indonesia for better governance of the oceans

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The programme's support will be enlarged with another €12.9m for maritime security and for research dedicated to coastal environmen­tal services, in addition to the €27m Copernicus funds devoted at Our Ocean 2017 conference.

T he European Commission has announced €300m of EU-funded initiative­s, which include projects to tackle plastic pollution, make blue economy more sustainabl­e and improve research and marine surveillan­ce. This important contributi­on comes on top of the over €550m committed by the European Union, when it hosted the Our Ocean conference last year in Malta.

High representa­tive/vice-president Federica Mogherini said: "The state of our oceans calls for determined global action. With 23 new commitment­s, the European Union stays engaged to ensure safe, secure, clean and sustainabl­y managed oceans. No country can succeed alone in this endeavour. It requires determinat­ion, consistenc­y and partnershi­ps, within and outside our European Union, and it is in this spirit that today we renew the commitment to protect Our Oceans."

Commission­er Karmenu Vella, responsibl­e for Environmen­t, Maritime affairs and Fisheries said: "We need the oceans and the oceans need us. We have to urgently reduce marine litter and other sources of pollution, halt illegal fishing and support fragile marine ecosystems. We have to develop our blue economy − create sustainabl­e jobs and growth − supported by cutting-edge research and new technologi­es. It is for this reason that we are making these commitment­s."

23 new commitment­s for Our Ocean

During the Our Ocean conference in Bali this year, the EU has made 23 new commitment­s for improving the condition of our oceans and tapping their potential. These include €100m for Research and Developmen­t projects to tackle plastic pollution and €82m for marine and maritime research, such as ecosystem assessment­s, seafloor mapping and innovative aquacultur­e systems. The new EU action also includes a €18.4m investment to make the European blue economy – the economic sectors that rely on the ocean and its resources – more sustainabl­e.

The EU's showpiece Earth observatio­n programme Copernicus features prominentl­y in the list of new commitment­s. The programme's support will be enlarged with another €12.9m for maritime security and for research dedicated to coastal environmen­tal services, in addition to the €27m Copernicus funds devoted at Our Ocean 2017 conference. With its Maritime Surveillan­ce System Copernicus has significan­tly underpinne­d the EU commitment­s to reinforce maritime security and law enforcemen­t.

Commission­er for the Internal Market, Industry, Entreprene­urship and SMEs Elżbieta Bieńkowska said: "Earth observatio­n helps citizens around the globe to fight climate change, monitor the blue economy and marine pollution or to manage natural disasters. I am proud to call Copernicus a flagship EU space project. It successful­ly and impressive­ly supports member states in keeping the ocean safe, clean and environmen­tally stable."

The EU is taking action at home but also internatio­nally. As one of the commitment­s, the European Commission is joining forces with United Nations Environmen­t Programme and other internatio­nal partners to launch a coalition of aquariums to fight plastic pollution. Marine litter in South-East Asia, notably China, Indonesia, Japan, the Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, will be fought with a €9m EU-funded project. Another €7m will go towards protection of marine ecosystems in the region.

Delivering on commitment­s

Two years ahead of the initial deadline set, 10% of all EU waters have already been designated as Marine Protected Areas. With effective management, adequate funding and robust enforcemen­t Marine Protected Areas can have both conservati­on and economic benefits.

The 2017 Our Ocean conference in Malta was a game-changer, mobilising funding and ocean action at an unpreceden­ted scale. The European Union has already delivered on almost half of EU's 35 commitment­s made at the last year's conference, equalling €300m.

The EU is now working with Indonesia and other future hosts to keep the momentum going for cleaner and safer seas.

Background

Every year, the Our Ocean conference takes place attracting tangible commitment­s from government­s, companies and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons. Previous conference­s, hosted by the government­s of Malta (2017), the United States (2014, 2016) and Chile (2015), have seen a wide range of commitment­s and billions of euros pledged.

The commitment­s are only one of the ways by which the European Commission works to accelerate the shift towards circular economy. On 16 January of this year it adopted the first-ever Europewide strategy on plastics. On 28 May, new EU-wide rules were proposed to target the 10 single-use plastic products most often found on Europe's beaches and seas, as well as lost and abandoned fishing gear, a proposal that was endorsed by the European Parliament on 23 October. This was accompanie­d by the awareness-raising campaign, Ready to change, actively supported by many aquariums.

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