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WATER WORLD
UN moves toward major treaty for ocean biodiversity
By Andr� VIOLLAZ
United Nations, United States (AFP) Jan 24, 2015


Ocean science needs more funding: US
Miami (AFP) Jan 23, 2015 - Facing critical dangers like rising seas and the impact of climate change on marine life, US scientists need more funding in the next decade, officials said Friday.

A new report from the National Research Council is calling for cuts in money spent on infrastructure and more cash devoted to basic scientific research from 2015-2025.

Undertaken at the request of the National Science Foundation's Division of Ocean Sciences (OCE), the report also identifies eight priority research areas.

These include more research on how climate change will impact the marine food web, and improved forecasting of tsunamis and earthquakes -- which along with other extreme weather events will become more frequent as the planet warms.

"From 2000 to 2014, OCE's annual budgets have not kept pace with the rising costs of operating and maintaining research infrastructure, including the fleet of academic research vessels, scientific ocean drilling facilities, and the Ocean Observatories Initiative," the report stated.

"As a consequence, the increase in infrastructure costs has led to a substantial decline in funding for core research programs and therefore less support for investigators."

The report's eight research priorities were narrowed down by how much impact they would have on society, their transformative potential, readiness and partnership potential with other agencies.

Other priorities included an examination of the role of biodiversity in marine ecosystem resilience, and how the characteristics of the sub seafloor environment affects our understanding of the origin and evolution of life.

"The next decade and beyond should be a time of opportunity and progress in ocean science, with advances that benefit the societal and economic goals not only of our nation but also the world," said committee co-chair Shirley Pomponi, executive director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Cooperative Institute for Ocean Exploration, Research, and Technology.

UN member states agreed Saturday to begin negotiations on a treaty to protect marine biodiversity in ocean areas extending beyond territorial waters, in a move heralded by environmental organizations.

The eventual UN treaty would be the first to specifically address protection of marine life, calling for the preservation of vast areas threatened by pollution, overfishing and global warming.

But the agreement was reached only after a small group of countries engaged in fishing and ocean mining blocked a more rapid timeline during the discussions between experts from the 193 member countries.

A majority of nations called for quick action but several countries such as the United States, Russia, Canada, Iceland and Japan expressed reluctance.

The treaty represents international zones that make up 64 percent of the world's oceans or a total of 43 percent of Earth's surface.

"This is the biggest biosphere on earth and there is no legal instrument in place to establish national parks at sea to protect marine life," Karen Sack of the Pew Charitable Trusts told AFP.

The agreement was also welcomed by the High Seas Alliance, a group of NGOs and environmental organizations, which called it "a major step toward urgently needed ocean protection."

"Today's agreement could go a long way in securing the protection the high seas desperately need," Greenpeace's Sofia Tsenikli said in a statement.

In addition to its role regulating the climate, the ocean is a source of protein to some three billion people.

The agreement was made after four days of discussions in New York, and still must be approved by the UN General Assembly by September, with a treaty appearing at the earliest in 2018.

According to the agreement's text, a preparatory committee will begin outlining a treaty in 2016 and make recommendations to the General Assembly at its September 2017 session.

The body must then decide "on the convening and on the starting date of an intergovernmental conference under the auspices of the UN."

The treaty would concern "conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction," creating in particular, "marine protected areas" and sharing of benefits derived from the deep sea, such as marine genetic resources, the text said.

International treaties and conventions already regulate activities such as fishing or protection of certain areas, but no text covers all dangers threatening marine life.

The UN has been in discussions on the matter for 10 years, but the General Assembly pushed for action following the Rio+20 conference on Earth's environmental problems and enduring poverty in 2012.


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