The Guardian (USA)

World leaders descend on France for ocean summit as Macron puts spotlight on seas

- Jon Henley

Up to 40 world leaders are due to make “ambitious and concrete commitment­s” towards combating illegal fishing, decarbonis­ing shipping and reducing plastic pollution at what is billed as the first high-level summit dedicated to the ocean.

One Ocean summit, which opens on Wednesday in the French port of Brest, aims to mobilise “unpreceden­ted internatio­nal political engagement” for a wide range of pressing maritime issues, said its chief organiser, Olivier Poivre d’Arvor.

“It is essential,” Poivre d’Arvor said. “The climate has its Cop process but there is no equivalent for the ocean, at a time when man’s relationsh­ip with the marine world has become more and more toxic, and global heating is causing extreme change.”

Convened by the French president, Emmanuel Macron, as a highlight of France’s six-month EU presidency, the three-day summit will also focus on efforts to improve governance of the high seas and coordinati­ng internatio­nal scientific research.

Poivre d’Arvor, France’s ambassador for the north and south poles and marine issues, noted that the ocean covers more than 70% of the Earth’s surface, is a vital climate regulator, rich in resources, key to trade and an essential link between nations.

“But it’s routinely left aside in major summits, and is now under serious threat from a whole range of different pressures. So this initiative is about raising internatio­nal ambition and getting concrete, measurable commitment­s to tangible action,” he said.

Poivre d’Arvor, a keen sailor who recently published Voyage en Mers Françaises (Travels in France’s Seas), said France was the world’s second-biggest sea power after the US, with exclusive economic zones totalling more than 11m sq km.

“There aren’t many countries that have legitimacy on this, but France is one of them,” he said. “There is a role for ‘blue diplomacy’ in a host of areas, from piracy to pollution to overfishin­g and carbon storage. I think that’s what interests the president.”

Poivre d’Arvor said more than 55 countries would be represente­d in the Brittany port, with 18 or 19 heads of state and government attending in person and about the same number taking part by live video link or sending recorded messages.

The summit will also bring together big shipping companies such as Maersk, CMA CGM and HapagLloyd,

which account for nearly 55% of the world’s maritime freight, as well as leading scientists, non-government­al organisati­ons (NGO), policymake­rs and internatio­nal bodies.

“The principle is that those that are attending are coming with commitment­s,” Poivre d’Arvor said. “The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, will announce EU-wide commitment­s. This is not about debating, it’s about doing.”

The first two days of the summit are devoted to 30 public workshops and forums on topics including marine science, the Mediterran­ean, sustainabl­e shipping, green ports, and cities at risk from rising sea levels, involving about 300 researcher­s, entreprene­urs and representa­tives of internatio­nal organisati­ons including the UN.

The high-level summit on Friday morning will involve heads of state and government from all five continents, Poivre d’Arvor said, including leaders of several major world economies, although he would not be drawn on names.

NGOs and campaigner­s have said the summit must deliver in several key areas if it is not to be seen as an exercise in “blue-washing”. Many, including Greenpeace, have said the most pressing problem is governance of the high seas – waters outside of national economic exclusion zones, which cover about half the globe.

Here, the main goal is to protect biodiversi­ty and marine ecosystems and make progress on some kind of legal order before a UN internatio­nal conference in New York in March 2022. Campaigner­s have said they expect to see the summit produce “ambitious targets and solid progress” towards that meeting.

Deep-sea exploratio­n – below 200 metres – is another controvers­ial topic, with mining companies, in particular, starting to show an interest in rare minerals, including nickel and cobalt, beneath parts of the ocean floor.

France abstained from voting on a call at last September’s IUCN world conservati­on congress for a moratorium on deep-sea mining and Macron has since said he favours more deepsea exploratio­n. The Deep Sea Conservati­on Coalition has said France must formally back the mining moratorium, likening biodiversi­ty at the bottom of the ocean to that in tropical rainforest­s.

Credible pledges to place 30% of the world’s marine habitats in protected zones – compared with the current 7.7% – by 2030 is another internatio­nal target campaigner­s want reinforced at the summit, as are concrete steps to tackle overfishin­g, a politicall­y sensitive subject that some fear may not even be raised by the heads of state.

Nineteen NGOs including the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition, Sea Shepherd, Greenpeace, the High Seas Alliance Environmen­tal Justice Foundation wrote to the French newspaper Le Monde on Monday to demand “major political announceme­nts that will allow significan­t progress for the health of the global ocean”.

They called on delegates to “express their full support for the conclusion of a strong, ambitious and legally binding treaty for internatio­nal waters in 2022”, as well as for a political decision to relaunch consultati­ons with Russia and China and measurable progress on overfishin­g.

“Decision-makers at the summit have a real political opportunit­y to raise the importance of the ocean’s health in internatio­nal policymaki­ng,” the signatorie­s wrote. “The time is no longer for words and observatio­ns; the solutions exist, and all that is missing is the political will to put them in place.”

 ?? ?? The port of Brest in Brittany, where heads of state, big shipping firms, NGOs and scientists will meet for the One Ocean summit. Photograph: Sen Li/Getty
The port of Brest in Brittany, where heads of state, big shipping firms, NGOs and scientists will meet for the One Ocean summit. Photograph: Sen Li/Getty
 ?? Dominique Charriau/WireImage ?? Olivier Poivre d’Arvor, the chief organiser of the One Ocean summit. Photograph:
Dominique Charriau/WireImage Olivier Poivre d’Arvor, the chief organiser of the One Ocean summit. Photograph:

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