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UN now pushing for ratification of treaty to protect the planet's fragile oceans

UN now pushing for ratification of treaty to protect the planet's fragile oceans

The Star4 hours ago

NICE, France (Reuters): United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday urged world leaders to ratify a treaty that would allow nations to establish protected marine areas in international waters, warning that human activity was destroying ocean ecosystems.
Guterres, speaking at the opening of the third U.N. Ocean Conference in Nice, cautioned that illegal fishing, plastic pollution and rising sea temperatures threatened delicate ecosystems and the people who depend on them.
"The ocean is the ultimate shared resource. But we are failing it," Guterres said, citing collapsing fish stocks, rising sea levels and ocean acidification.
Oceans also provide a vital buffer against climate change, by absorbing around 30% of planet-heating CO2 emissions. But as the oceans heat up, hotter waters are destroying marine ecosystems and threatening the oceans' ability to absorb CO2.
"These are symptoms of a system in crisis - and they are feeding off each other. Unravelling food chains. Destroying livelihoods. Deepening insecurity."
The High Seas Treaty, adopted in 2023, would permit countries to establish marine parks in international waters, which cover nearly two-thirds of the ocean and are largely unregulated.
Hitherto, only an estimated 1% of international waters, known as the "high seas", have been protected.
The drive for nations to turn years of promises into meaningful protection for the oceans comes as President Donald Trump pulls the United States and its money out of climate projects and as some European governments weaken green policy commitments as they seek to support anaemic economies and fend off nationalists.
The United States has not yet ratified the treaty and will not do so during the conference, Rebecca Hubbard, director of The High Seas Alliance, said.
"If they don't ratify, they are not bound by it," she said. "The implementation will take years, but it is critical we start now, and we won't let the U.S. absence stop that from happening."
French President Emmanuel Macron, the conference's co-host, told delegates that 50 countries had now ratified the treaty and that another 15 had promised to do so.
The treaty will only come into force once 60 countries ratify it. Macron's foreign minister said he expected that would happen before the end of the year.
The United States has not sent a high-level delegation to the conference.
"It's not a surprise, we know the American administration's position on these issues," Macron told reporters late on Sunday.
Britain's Prince William on Sunday said protecting the planet's oceans was a challenge "like none we have faced before".
Ocean experts have also seized on the conference as an opportunity to rally investment for the ocean economy, which has long struggled to attract sizeable funding commitments.
At a two-day gathering of bankers and investors in Monaco over the weekend, philanthropists, private investors and public banks committed 8.7 billion euros over five years to support a regenerative and sustainable blue economy.
Investments in ocean health totalled just $10 billion from 2015-2019 - far below the $175 billion per year needed, the U.N. has said.
To address this gap, the U.N. said on Sunday it was starting work to design a new financing facility, to be launched in 2028, which aims to unlock billions of dollars to restore ocean health by mobilising new and diverse sources of capital.
(Reporting by Manuel Ausloos and Clotaire Achi in Nice, Benoit van Overstraeten in Paris, Virginia Furness in London; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Hugh Lawson) - Reuters

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Nato chief urges 400pct rise in alliance's air defence

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