Nations agree on ‘world-changing’ deal to protect ocean life

From  WaPo

Leo Sands and Dino Grandon | March 5, 2023

U.N. agrees on long-awaited treaty to protect the high seas

More than 190 countries agreed on a long-awaited pact to help safeguard the high seas and reverse biodiversity loss, at a United Nations conference on Mar. 4

More than 190 countries have reached a landmark deal for protecting the biodiversity of the world’s oceans, agreeing for the first time on a common framework for establishing new protected areas in international waters.

A country’s legal authority generally extends 200 nautical miles from its shores. After that are the high seas, where no one nation is in charge.

The new agreement will not automatically establish any new marine protection areas in the high seas, but it creates a mechanism for nations to begin designating them in international waters for the first time. That ability is crucial for enforcing the promises made at last year’s U.N. biodiversity summit, COP15, where delegates pledged to protect nearly a third of Earth’s land and oceans by 2030 as a refuge for the planet’s remaining wild plants and animals.

The high seas treaty makes it easier for that goal to be reached, as it allows vast swaths of vulnerable marine ecosystems in international waters to be subject to protections. It will also offer protections for millions of organisms inhabiting the high seas — Earth’s largest physical habitat, Hubbard said.

 

In the oceans, many sea starssturgeon and other species are already on the decline. Sharks are threatened by overfishing, and coral reefs are succumbing to the acidification of the oceans. The deterioration of marine ecosystems could hurt billions of coastal residents who depend on seafood for protein.

Among the biodiversity hot spots to which marine conservationists want to extend protections are the Sargasso Sea in the Atlantic and the Costa Rica Thermal Dome in the Pacific.

Splitting up the bounty of the seas benefits

The new agreement is the first of its kind to protect oceans since 1982, when the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea was adopted, establishing a single set of rules that governed the world’s oceans and their resources.

The treaty’s final text had not yet been published in full as of Sunday, but according to the State Department, it also establishes frameworks for nations to coordinate on environmental impact assessments and to share marine genetic resources — scientific knowledge about deep-sea organisms found in remote waters that could be of value to humankind.

Activists from Greenpeace display a banner during negotiations at the U.N. headquarters in New York. (Ed Jones/AFP/Getty Images)

One of the biggest sticking points in negotiations between rich and poor nations was determining who would benefit financially from discoveries made on the high seas.

Who profits, for example, when scientists find a compound in a sea creature that treats a disease in humans? In 2010, for instance, the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of a cancer-fighting drug derived from a sea sponge.

Nations promise to protect 30 percent of planet to stem extinction

 

“Developing countries typically don’t have the technology, the access and the resources to do research in the high seas,” said Liz Karan, director of ocean governance at the Pew Charitable Trusts.

Ultimately, developed nations agreed to share some of those profits with developing ones, Karan said.

What about climate change?

Though the treaty’s main goal is safeguarding life in Earth’s seas, it will also help efforts to fight climate change. Research published in the journal Nature in 2021 suggested that efforts to protect more of the world’s waters would not only support marine diversity, but would also boost the amount of carbon absorbed by the ocean.

How protecting the ocean can save species and fight climate change

 

“The ocean is also — physically — our biggest ally in the fight against climate change,” said Hubbard of the High Seas Alliance. “Without an ocean full of marine life, it cannot continue to sequester and store carbon.”

“We have a degraded ocean on our hands, but the ocean has a phenomenal capacity to restore itself.”

   Sarah Kaplan contributed to this report.

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