Otago Daily Times

Oceans’ role should be included: expert

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

OCEANS are warming, coral reefs are disappeari­ng and sea levels are rising, but neverthele­ss the oceans’ own role in the fight against climate change was not part of the landmark climate change advice package delivered to Government last week.

University of Otago climate and marine science specialist Linn Hoffmann said whether or not oceans fitted into the accounting method used to create New Zealand’s first emissions budgets it would be a mistake to ignore the country’s coasts.

In its 418page advice package for a lowemissio­ns future, the Climate Change Commission said oceans’ ability to store carbon, known as blue carbon, was an outofscope subject raised by several submitters during consultati­on.

Growing seagrasses, seaweed and mangroves could help store carbon, the advice said.

And bottomtraw­ling or disturbing marine habitat could release it.

But more work was needed to figure out how to account for the scale and permanence of oceanrelat­ed emissions, it said.

Dr Hoffmann, a senior lecturer at the university, said even if researcher­s could not yet assign values to oceanrelat­ed emissions it was a ‘‘nobrainer’’ that sediment runoff, dredging and overfishin­g had an impact on climate change.

Scientists knew healthy marine ecosystems could take up carbon in large amounts and their role should be part of New Zealand’s strategy to reduce emissions, she said.

It was well known that kelp forests, for example, were hugely efficient in photosynth­esis and taking up carbon, Dr Hoffmann said.

But the research was not there yet to include kelp forests in the calculatio­ns of the country’s first emissions budgets.

‘‘We are really at a point where we are running out of time. We can’t say we need 10 more years of research on this — we simply don’t have the time.’’

The Ministry for the Environmen­t summed up the commission’s advice as the ‘‘roadmap’’ for the country to slash emissions and become carbon neutral by 2050.

Some of the final recommenda­tions include decarbonis­ing road transport by 2050, setting a farm emissions carbonpric­ing scheme, phasing out coal as soon as possible and establishi­ng a plan for new native forests, it said.

Another outofscope issue raised by the commission is the exclusion of internatio­nal aviation and shipping.

The commission said it would review whether to include those emissions in 2024, but it had allowed for their inclusion in its advice.

The commission’s final advice sets out the total amount of emissions New Zealand must cut over the next 15 years.

It also provides three different pathways the Government could follow to keep within the proposed emission budgets.

The Government is due to publish an emissions reduction plan before the end of the year.

 ?? PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON ?? Blue carbon . . . A low tide at Harwood reveals a blanket of marine plant life below Otago Harbour’s surface. Healthy coastal ecosystems have a large role to play in controllin­g global carbon emissions and marine scientists say it is a mistake the ocean’s ‘‘blue carbon’’ is not included in the Climate Change Commission’s advice to Government.
PHOTO: LINDA ROBERTSON Blue carbon . . . A low tide at Harwood reveals a blanket of marine plant life below Otago Harbour’s surface. Healthy coastal ecosystems have a large role to play in controllin­g global carbon emissions and marine scientists say it is a mistake the ocean’s ‘‘blue carbon’’ is not included in the Climate Change Commission’s advice to Government.

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