The high seas, the area of ocean beyond national jurisdiction, comprises two-thirds of the global ocean and covers nearly half the planet. It provides food, jobs, oxygen, climate stabilisation, and other crucial benefits for humans and the global ecosystem. Yet for generations we have treated the high seas as though its resources were inexhaustible and its biodiversity indestructible.
Effective conservation and management of the high seas is hampered by an antiquated system of regional and sectoral bodies that govern different types of human activities in an inconsistent and uncoordinated fashion, leading to overfishing, habitat destruction, and noise, chemical, and plastic pollution. The effects of poor management have been exacerbated by climate change and related impacts: Ìýfrom climate change and one-quarter of the carbon dioxide emissions humans have generated by burning fossil fuels. The ocean is the warmest it has been since measurements began, the , and is .
Conservation and management of the high seas is hampered by an antiquated system of regional and sectoral bodies that govern different types of human activities leading to overfishing, habitat destruction, and noise, chemical, and plastic pollution.
A new treaty for the high seas
Fortunately, there is a worldwide effort underway that can help address many of the threats our oceans face: governments at the United Nations are currently negotiating a legally binding treaty to improve conservation of biodiversity in the high seas. The new treaty will include provisions that could allow for the creation of fully protected marine protected areas (MPAs), establish uniform environmental impact assessment and management standards, and require more equitable distribution of potential benefits stemming from the development of genetic resources of the high seas.
The treaty was set to be finalized by the end of 2020; however, that timeline has shifted due to the pandemic, so Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹ûÏÖ³¡Ö±²¥ members still have the opportunity to make their voices heard in favour of a strong, conservation-oriented high seas regime. One such opportunity is - Advancing conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity in the ocean beyond national jurisdiction. NRDC and 13 co-sponsors put forward that motion for the next Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹ûÏÖ³¡Ö±²¥ World Conservation Congress, to be held in Marseille, France from January 7 to 15, 2021.
The motion calls on governments to adopt a treaty that contains elements crucial for effective high seas conservation. Among other provisions, the motion aims to ensure that the final treaty text provides for the rapid establishment of a well-managed network of highly- and fully-protectedÌýMPAs, rigorous and science-based assessment and management of individual and cumulative effects of human activities and climate change, and effective institutional arrangements to ensure full implementation, monitoring, compliance, and enforcement. The treaty should also allow for effective capacity building and transfer of marine technology, andÌýfair and equitable sharing of monetary and non-monetary benefits from development of pharmaceuticals and other innovations fromÌý. Importantly, the treaty should ensure that, if environmental assessments find that an activity poses significant adverse effects to areas beyond national jurisdiction, such activity is managed to prevent such impacts or is not permitted to proceed.
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