The Nature Conservancy calls for formal adoption and signing of the High Seas Treaty text to take place as soon as possible
HONG KONG, March 20, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- After over a decade of negotiations, governments convening in New York City agreed on a landmark United Nations treaty to protect 30% of the high seas by 2030. High seas refer to vast areas of open ocean that lie beyond territorial waters that collectively cover nearly half of Earth's surface, so this treaty can play a significant role in safeguarding and restoring the ocean's biodiversity. Formal adoption and signing of the treaty text must take place as soon as possible. With two previous rounds of high-level negotiations ending in deadlock, finally reaching an international agreement on this long-awaited UN High Seas Treaty represents a landmark moment in humanity's relationship with the ocean.
One of the most significant aspects of the new treaty is how it will enable countries to establish new Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) in the high seas – a crucial step in helping world leaders deliver on the 30x30 global protection target they enshrined in December's UN Global Biodiversity Framework.
Another important element of the treaty is its ambition to modernize environmental impact assessments (EIAs) by improving standards and bringing greater consistency to how countries measure and manage the impact of human activities on the high seas.
Despite these positives, the new agreement also leaves significant scope for improvement. In particular, countries agreed that those existing bodies already responsible for regulating human activities like fisheries, shipping or deep-sea mining can, for now, continue to do so without having to follow the environmental impact standards laid out in the treaty. Nevertheless, over time, the treaty's new environmental impact assessment requirements will help reform and strengthen the management of these activities too.
Clauses were also included that allow signatory countries to opt-out from MPAs established under the agreement in certain circumstances.
Given the declining health of the ocean and the persistent failure of current systems to tackle the issue, these exemptions represent a major loophole.
Commenting on the outcome of the New York meetings, The Nature Conservancy's (TNC) ocean policy lead Andreas Hansen said:
"The new High Seas Treaty represents a significant milestone. The ocean has no time to lose so countries must now swiftly adopt and ratify the treaty and use its powers to turn words on a page into benefits for the ocean."
"States must also bring their weight to bear to increase ambition in those bodies that already hold responsibility for managing critical aspects of human activity, such as fishing, on the high seas. To leave them as is means to preserve a system that has proven ineffective for solving the complex problems facing the high seas today."
"We're therefore calling on member states of these organizations to step up and align their actions with both the scale of the ecological crisis, but also their international obligations under the Paris Agreement and Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework."
"A damaging status quo is driving the climate and biodiversity crises facing our world. Armed with the new High Seas Treaty and other key UN policy frameworks, states now have the opportunity to move beyond business-as-usual and into a new, nature-positive era for the relationship between humanity and the ocean that represents our collective life-support system."
About The Nature Conservancy (TNC)
The Nature Conservancy is a global conservation organization dedicated to conserving the lands and waters on which all life depends. Guided by science, we create innovative, on-the-ground solutions to our world's toughest challenges so that nature and people can thrive together. We are tackling climate change, conserving lands, waters and oceans at unprecedented scale, providing food and water sustainably and helping make cities more sustainable. Working in 76 countries and territories, we use a collaborative approach that engages local communities, governments, the private sector, and other partners. TNC was awarded the Lui Che Woo Prize for Sustainability in 2019. To know more about TNC's work in Asia Pacific, please visit: www.tnc.org.hk.
SOURCE The Nature Conservancy Hong Kong
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