时间:2025-07-15 06:02:03 来源:网络整理编辑:休閑
Ocean conservation efforts took a significant step forward on Friday when a measure to protect 30 pe
Ocean conservation efforts took a significant step forward on Friday when a measure to protect 30 percent of the world's oceans by 2030 passed during a major meeting in Hawaii.
The resolution, which is non-binding, garnered widespread support from the governments and global organizations gathered in Honolulu for the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) World Conservation Congress.
Marine scientists say expanding Marine Protected Areas is essential in order to spare oceans from further destruction and ensure that ecosystems stay healthy enough to adapt to human-caused climate change.
SEE ALSO:Obama visits remote Midway Atoll to highlight climate change threats"Marine reserves are also climate reserves, and protecting 30 percent of the ocean will ensure local communities are more resilient to climate change," Seth Horstmeyer, a director with The Pew Charitable Trusts' Global Ocean Legacy project, said in a statement after the vote.
The world's oceans produce around half the Earth's oxygen, store about 90 percent of the world's carbon dioxide and encompass a whopping 95 percent of the planet's living space.
Yet marine ecosystems are increasingly at risk because of human activities -- from industrial fishing and coastal development to dumping toxic waste, plastics pollution and ocean acidification.
"If we don't ensure the biosphere is intact and well-protected, then we put ourselves at risk over the long-term," Callum Roberts, a professor of marine conservation at the University of York in England, said by phone.
Danny Auron, a campaign director at the non-profit advocacy organization Avaaz, told Mashablethe 30-percent target is not only "ambitious and inspiring" but also "the minimum that scientists say we need to survive as a species."
The 30-percent ocean protection goal is a drastic jump from today's levels, and marks a new achievement for a growing movement to guard against further degradation of marine ecosystems.
The move comes less than a week before the World Oceans Conference in Washington, where U.S. President Barack Obama will give an address.
Less than 4 percent of oceans currently fall within a Marine Protected Area -- even with Obama's expansion last month of the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument in the Northern Hawaiian Islands.
On Aug. 26, Obama quadrupled the size of the monument to nearly 583,000 square miles, making it the largest protected area of any kind -- marine or terrestrial -- in the world.
Countries previously set a target to protect 10 percent of oceans by 2012 during the United Nations' Convention on Biological Diversity. They later revised the deadline to 2020 after it was clear the world would miss its original goal.
Proponents of stronger protection measures say the 10-percent target was largely based on politics: It sounded ambitious enough for countries to get behind, but wasn't actually rooted in science.
"We are entirely unrealistic to think that nature can cope with the protection of 10 percent the seas," Roberts, the marine conservation professor, told Mashable.
Roberts and his colleagues reviewed 144 studies to determine whether the 10-percent target was enough to protect global fish populations and keep ecosystems healthy. The average value of those studies was 37 percent of oceans, the researchers said in an April paper published in the journal Conservation Letters.
"What that says is, you have to protect a very significant area of ocean in order to contribute meaningfully to conservation and fisheries management objectives," Roberts told Mashable.
"We're just way out of scale with those targets right now," he said.
Countries have a host of economic and strategic reasons for not wanting to rope off their sovereign waters.
Japan, for instance, exports around 1.4 trillion yen ($11.6 billion) worth of seafood each year. New Zealand's offshore oil and gas fields contribute billions of dollars to its economy and tax income. China's controversial artificial islands in the South China Sea bolster its military presence in the region.
But governments' reluctance to establish Marine Protected Areas isn't the biggest challenge to actually achieving the 30 percent by 2030 target.
IUCN Members Assembly: Vote 'YES' On Motion 53 To Support Protection For 30% Of The Ocean! #Protect30 #IUCNCongress pic.twitter.com/wX0C17hohR
— Sylvia A. Earle (@SylviaEarle) September 7, 2016
The largest hurdle will be deciding how to manage protected zones in the so-called high seas -- the swaths of ocean that don't fall under the control of state or national governments. Around 65 percent of the oceans falls into this category.
"At some point, you start to run out of waters in the jurisdiction of nations," Horstmeyer said in an interview.
"Ultimately we'll also have to look at the high seas."
While various councils under the United Nations oversee global fishing, mining and shipping activities, no such body exists to manage Marine Protected Areas in the high seas.
"There's no effective means of protecting this common heritage," Lance Morgan, president of the Marine Conservation Institute, told Mashableby phone from the Honolulu summit.
The U.N. last year launched a diplomatic process to resolve such thorny questions as: Who can propose a protected area in the high seas? Who is responsible for managing them, and who would foot the bill? Should the U.N. create a new agency just for Marine Protected Areas?
Morgan said that, if all goes to plan, the process should wrap up in 2018, giving countries about 12 years to establish conservation zones before the 2030 deadline.
"That's a pretty good time frame to start doing bigger and more important things," he said.
"With more than 60 percent of the ocean in the high seas, it will be virtually impossible to hit that 30-percent target without a treaty in place to negotiate that."
"It will be virtually impossible to hit that 30-percent target without a treaty in place to negotiate that."
Despite the deep well of bureaucracy and politics surrounding the new marine conservation target, participants in Hawaii last week said they had felt optimistic -- in large part because of the success surrounding the Paris climate change agreement.
Leaders from nearly 200 nations signed a global pact to curb greenhouse gas emissions and limit global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius, or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, relative to preindustrial levels by 2100.
With the U.S. and China formally signing on this month, the agreement may enter into force by the end of this year.
"There's a feeling that ambitious goals are possible to achieve, and governments are coming to the realization that it's time to actually start moving on these things," said Auron, the Avaaz campaign director.
These glasses hide a fitness tracker on your face2025-07-15 05:40
世體:哈維優先希望引進右後衛,但也保留了簽下加蘭的選項2025-07-15 05:27
拉波爾塔真杠精 !巴薩把西甲規則研究明白了,孔德已完成注冊2025-07-15 04:59
加盟在即 !羅馬諾:福法納今日接受切爾西體檢2025-07-15 04:42
Did our grandparents have the best beauty advice?2025-07-15 04:35
巴薩公布對陣巴拉多利德大名單 :孔德在列2025-07-15 04:18
穆勒談德裏赫特踢中鋒 :以前範比滕也踢過,這沒啥特別的2025-07-15 03:52
多大仇?曼聯棄帥又攪黃C羅加盟切爾西 !名記 :他去哪隊都是累贅2025-07-15 03:48
Carlos Beltran made a very interesting hair choice2025-07-15 03:41
三鎮主帥:我們浪費了一些機會 每個隊員都具備首發的能力2025-07-15 03:27
This app is giving streaming TV news a second try2025-07-15 05:57
想贏拜仁 ,最有效的是2種套路:當前的巴薩不容易做到2025-07-15 05:27
薩比策:不在乎拜仁是否簽萊默爾 ,我和基米希搭檔非常互補2025-07-15 05:07
9球大勝伯恩茅斯 利物浦追平英超曆史單場最大分差2025-07-15 04:55
Pokémon Go is so big that it has its own VR porn parody now2025-07-15 04:51
巴黎今晚有沒有7+ ?法甲巴黎聖曼vs摩納哥進球數多 、蘭斯vs裏昂2025-07-15 04:21
多大仇?曼聯棄帥又攪黃C羅加盟切爾西!名記:他去哪隊都是累贅2025-07-15 04:02
貝爾戈米:國米有時要主動放棄控球誘敵深入,孔蒂當時知道怎麽做2025-07-15 03:59
Two astronauts just installed a new parking spot on the International Space Station2025-07-15 03:44
英超豪門夜!13冠王創曆史+領跑,利物浦首勝 ,曼聯、曼城止雪崩2025-07-15 03:34