GOAL 14 : LIFE BELOW WATER

14 life below water

GOAL  14 : LIFE BELOW WATER

Market value of marine and coastal resources and industries is estimated at US $3 trillion per year, or about 5% of global GDP.40 Yet, as much as 40% of the oceans are suffering negative effects from human activities, including pollution, depleted fisheries, and loss of coastal habitats because of poor management. Providing education on sustainable practices to fishing communities in developing regions can help to enhance economic returns and manage ocean degradation. 

For example, teaching people how to reduce the number of abandoned nets in ocean environments protects aquatic life from the dangers of lost or discarded nets that damage coral reefs and trap and entangle fish, marine mammals and birds. Education is necessary for people to learn how to conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development. Environmental education programs have facilitated important advances in national and regional efforts to fight climate change and protect marine life and ecosystems. But for these programs to reach their full potential, it is important that a country’s or region’s inhabitants have a strong primary and secondary educational base.

The world’s oceans – their temperature, chemistry, currents and life – drive global systems that make the Earth habitable for humankind. Our rainwater, drinking water, weather, climate, coastlines, much of our food, and even the oxygen in the air we breathe, are all ultimately provided and regulated by the sea. Throughout history, oceans and seas have been vital conduits for trade and transportation. Careful management of this essential global resource is a key feature of a sustainable future. However, at the current time, there is a continuous deterioration of coastal waters owing to pollution and ocean acidification is having an adversarial effect on the functioning of ecosystems and biodiversity. This is also negatively impacting small scale fisheries. Marine protected areas need to be effectively managed and well-resourced and regulations need to be put in place to reduce overfishing, marine pollution and ocean acidification.’

 

Climate Change Impacts 

The ocean is extremely vulnerable in the face of climate change

The ocean is being hit hard by climate change in the form of warming, acidification, and oxygen depletion. The 2019 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) special report on the ocean and cryosphere found that all of these effects were intensifying. A future ocean that is hotter, more acidic, and a more difficult place to breathe presents serious challenges. The ocean has absorbed more than 90% of the heat produced via greenhouse gas-associated warming since the 1970s – and, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2019 was the second-warmest year on record. Ocean life is largely accustomed to stable temperatures, and is vulnerable to related changes. Coral reefs, for example, which can house millions of species, are being bleached from overheating. Back-to-back extreme ocean heat waves in 2016 and 2017 caused massive bleaching of the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Australia, killing half of its coral. Potential related economic impacts, not to mention environmental impacts, are significant – a 2013 Deloitte study found that the Great Barrier Reef was generating about $7 billion in revenue for Australia, largely via tourism.

As the ocean warms, its oxygen levels drop. Oxygen content in the ocean declined by an estimated 2% global average between 1960 and 2010, according to a study published in the journal Nature, and IPCC scientists predict there could be a further 3% to 4% decrease by the end of the 21st century. Since the first industrial revolution, the acidity of the ocean has increased by roughly 30% as carbon dioxide dissolves in marine waters; this makes it more difficult for organisms to form healthy skeletons and shells. Scientists from the University of British Columbia’s Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries have predicted that if climate change continues unchecked, global fisheries may suffer $10 billion in annual revenue loss by 2050. Global warming-driven sea level rise may be the most impactful form of ocean-related climate change. Scientists predict that half the population in cities with more than 10 million inhabitants will be affected by sea level rise if climate change is not slowed; Miami, Shanghai, and dozens of other cities have already suffered related effects. Climate change must be aggressively checked in order to enable natural adaptation and evolution, and the best way to do this is to confront the difficult task of directly reducing global carbon emissions.

 

Human beings and its impact on the Ocean

The fates of the ocean and humanity are increasingly intertwined

The ocean is more than a beautiful home to inspiring wildlife; it is a critically important source of nutritious food, income, jobs, and global stability. The ocean yields $2.5 trillion annually in goods and services, according to a “conservative” estimate published in 2017 by the consultancy BCG, making it equivalent to one of the largest single economies in the world. The ocean provides millions of jobs in fishing, aquaculture, tourism, energy, transportation, and biotechnology. The value of ocean resources is particularly important for poor countries. Fishery net exports from developing countries alone have been valued at $37 billion, or more than value of meat, tobacco, rice, and sugar exports combined, according to a report published in 2018 by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). Wealthier nations are also dependent on ocean resources. The collapse of cod stocks along the east coast of Canada, for example, sparked the largest mass layoffs in the country’s history and prompted large-scale migration from affected provinces. Canada spent almost $2 billion between 1994 and 1998 on aid and recovery programs aimed at coping with this social and ecological disaster.

The ocean acts as a massive refrigerator of free-range, highly nutritious food fit for human consumption. According to the FAO, fish provide more than 3.1 billion people with at least 20% of their animal protein, and serve as a critically important source of nutrients essential to good health like iron, zinc, and omega-3 fatty acids. Researchers estimate that if current trajectories for fishery decline persist, 845 million people could become at risk of diseases associated with malnutrition. Ocean health and human health intersect in other important, but sometimes less obvious ways. Fishery declines have been linked to human trafficking when, for example, child and slave labour is used to capture increasingly rare fish. Another example: some analysts suggest that piracy in Somalia and West Africa can partially be explained by disenfranchised fishermen turning to violence in order to protect decreasing offshore fish stocks. In situations where overfishing has depleted potentially lucrative species, organized crime has also escalated. In Mexico’s Sea of Cortez, for example, it is believed that drug cartels may be involved in an illicit industry that is both depleting a critically-endangered fish and threatening to trigger the extinction of the Vaquita (a small porpoise).

 

Shifting Ocean Governance

Current regulation does not adequately address current challenges

The ocean has always been difficult to govern; it covers 90% of the habitable space on Earth, creating an immense, supranational domain with unique regulatory challenges. Unlike most natural assets on land, many ocean resources (such as the bluefin tuna that is prized for sushi) regularly swim across jurisdictional boundaries. In addition, damage incurred within one nation’s jurisdiction (like plastic pollution) can impact nations many thousands of kilometres away. Meanwhile climate change is driving seafood stocks towards the planet’s poles in a bid to escape warming waters. This can create worrisome volatility in less-developed regions, as fish travel out of the reach of countries that need them most. Unfortunately, policies that can properly address these issues have been deferred. Two-thirds of the ocean is located on the high seas, or outside of the jurisdiction of any single country. The United Nations has committed to developing a first-of-its-kind, legally-binding treaty to better manage biodiversity and resources on the high seas by 2020 – if it is successfully implemented, it could be a significant boon for ocean biodiversity.

The cross-border migration of valuable seafood can deprive developing economies of resources and spur regional conflict. Research published in the journal Science in 2018 suggested that as many as 70 countries will see new fish stocks in their national waters by the year 2100 as a result of climate change. New international agreements are needed to govern the sharing of fishery resources, and to prevent countries from overharvesting stocks when they realize assets are migrating beyond their borders. One positive related development has been the establishment of marine protected areas, which can buy time for at-risk ecosystems to better adapt to climate change. However, researchers at the University of York have concluded that about 30% of the ocean needs to be placed within protected areas in order to meet ocean health management goals – though just over 7% is currently designated as a protected area. The United Kingdom has protected an area of ocean larger than the country’s own land mass, and Chile, the US, and Kiribati have established protected areas that are collectively larger than Italy. As other countries seek to catch up, more must be done to ensure the effectiveness of existing protections.

 

 Emerging Ocean Technology 

New opportunities for ocean-based industries are emerging, and so are challenges

Technology is changing the ways that we harvest food, energy, minerals, and data from the ocean. Innovation in marine robotics, artificial intelligence, low-cost sensors, satellite systems, and the collection and analysis of data may yet create a cleaner and safer future – but can also undermine ocean health. Ocean mining is one example; portions of the seafloor are rich in gold, platinum, cobalt, and rare-earth elements that have up until now been out of reach. New, 300-ton mining machines have been developed that can harvest minerals in some of the deepest parts of the sea. Japan has completed its first large-scale mineral extraction from the seabed and plans to begin commercial mining in its national waters in the next decade. Meanwhile on the high seas, the Jamaica-based International Seabed Authority has issued more than 1 million square kilometres of mining exploration claims to 20 different countries. However, much of the seabed within these claims remains unexplored, and new species are frequently being discovered in the vicinity. It remains unclear if and how sediment plumes from seabed mining will affect the health of oceans generally, and fisheries specifically. Finding a way to balance mining interests with the health of ocean ecosystems and marine industries remains a challenge.

Revolutionary progress in our ability to collect and process ocean data has now enabled the detection of illegal fishing from space, empowered sustainability-focused companies to more efficiently connect with people, and helped build intelligent zoning plans that better balance the needs of fishermen, marine transportation, and ocean conservation. In addition, new technologies are being developed to plug into the ocean’s enormous stores of green energy (possibilities include wave energy, tidal energy, thermal energy, and offshore wind). The global offshore wind market grew by nearly 30% per year between 2010 and 2018, and the International Energy Agency estimates that global offshore wind will become a $1 trillion industry by 2040.  While remaining hurdles to harvesting ocean energy include cost efficiency and the potential impact of new ocean power plants on ocean life, other exciting innovations are on the way: a robot that swims like a tuna, underwater data centres, autonomous self-driving ships, and geodesic spheres that can serve as offshore fish farms, for example. Properly embraced, disruptive technologies can help us take more from the oceans while damaging them less.

 

Pollution and the Ocean

The ocean has become a receptacle for the world’s pollution

The most harmful ocean pollutant is – far and away – carbon pollution. In the last decade, the ocean has absorbed nearly a third of the carbon dioxide emitted by industrial activity. This has slowed climate change, but at great cost to ocean health. When carbon dioxide is absorbed by seawater it increases acidity levels, and threatens ocean life ranging from the microscopic snails that feed salmon to the coral reefs that support tourism. Plastics are another particularly insidious form of ocean pollution; according to the non-profit Ocean Conservancy, coastal nations generate 275 million metric tons of plastic waste every year (and 8 million metric tons of plastic enters the ocean). The Ellen MacArthur Foundation and the World Economic Forum jointly predicted that there will be more plastic than fish (by weight) in the ocean by 2050, and the United Nations Environment Programme has recorded more than 817 species of ocean animal that have encountered plastic pollution. Plastic pollution has also been detected in seafood sold for human consumption; a 2015 study by a team of University of California, Davis and Hasanuddin University researchers flagged man-made debris in 25% of seafood market fish, and 67% of all species sampled in the US.

According to a report published in the journal Science Advances in 2017, only 9% of plastic waste has been recycled globally – highlighting a need to re-think design and regulation in a way that incentivizes re-use. Potential solutions include policies that curb the use of single-use plastics like bags or straws, or improving the capture of plastics that leak out of waste systems. Researchers have found that just 10 of the world’s rivers are the source of 90% of the plastic pollution entering the ocean, pointing to a possible focus for efforts to curb plastic pollution as a matter of policy and industrial reform – by stopping pollution at its source. Another major source of ocean pollution is the runoff of fertilizers used in agriculture, which are carried down rivers into the ocean where they create population explosions of algae and bacteria. This in turn depletes oxygen levels, killing fish and creating inhospitable conditions for marine life. As a result, more than 400 low-oxygen “dead zones” have been documented in the ocean worldwide. The spread of these areas could be limited, in a way that also saves money for the agriculture industry, by deploying a more strategic and responsible application of fertilizers.

 

Mass Extinction

Ocean life is sitting on an extinction cliff

As far as life on land is concerned, we are undergoing what scientists have dubbed the “Sixth Mass Extinction” – as human-caused extinction rates approach levels last experienced during the era that saw the end of many dinosaur lineages. The situation in the ocean is a bit brighter, at least for the moment. According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, about 17 ocean animal extinctions have occurred in the past 500 years (during the same period, more than 500 land animal extinctions have occurred due to human activity). A report published in the journal Science projected that rates of extinction in the ocean could increase dramatically, however – particularly as climate change accelerates. Ocean animals that are under threat include Monk Seals (both the Hawaiian monk seal and the Mediterranean monk seal), Blue Whales (which were depleted in the early 1900s), and all six species of sea turtle found in US waters. Without a change to business as usual in ocean management, we may soon initiate an additional Sixth Mass Extinction in the ocean.

An industrial revolution is beginning in the ocean, with parallels to the industrial revolutions that have taken place on land. This involves a rapid expansion of marine industries such as ocean farming, marine energy, and marine transport – and a nearly five-fold increase in the amount of ocean area being explored for deep sea mining. According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, by May 2018 the International Seabed Authority had issued 29 contracts for the exploration of deep-sea mineral deposits, and more than 1.5 million square kilometres of international seabed (about the size of Mongolia) had been set aside for mineral exploration in the Pacific and Indian oceans and along the mid-Atlantic ridge. Mining in international waters is expected to begin in 2025, according to the IUCN. On land, animal extinction rates began accelerating rapidly during the first two industrial revolutions, when there was much less awareness of the link between human health and the environment. Now, the ocean presents an opportunity to intelligently move a marine industrial revolution forward without associated spikes in animal extinction that compromise nourishing resources.

 

Adaptation & Water

Cities are already experiencing a new climate reality. C40’s adaptation work helps cities to take action to protect residents and infrastructure from immediate and future climate risks, as well as to develop solutions and implement actions towards transformational, city-wide resilience to the impacts of climate change.

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A guide to private sector investment in coastal resilience

Coastal resilience is the ability of a coastal community to bounce back after hazardous events such as storms; and, more narrowly, the protection of people and property provided by natural infrastructure such as mangroves or coral reefs.

Based on the latest scientific reports that discuss interconnected and multi-dimensional risk, we believe that while some economic sectors might have a more direct risk reduction benefit than others from investing in coastal resilience, all private sector actors can mitigate certain types of risk they are now facing, or will be facing in the near future..

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The Ocean in Crisis

The ocean defines the history, economy, and culture of many coastal countries. But the world’s oceans are facing a multidimensional crisis driven by overfishing, pollution (especially plastics and nutrients), habitat loss, invasive species, and climate change (ocean acidification, warming and deoxygenation).

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Confronting the ocean acidification crisis

Financing Nature for  Water Security 

A HOW-TO GUIDE TO DEVELOP WATERSHED INVESTMENT PROGRAMS

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Mangroves for sustainable development

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How Well We Manage Water Will Determine How Climate Resilient We Are

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Celebrating 30 years of shared water

We tend to associate rivers and lakes with the countries in which they are located. Yet a little-known fact is that more than half of the world’s freshwater bodies are shared. Indeed, 153 countries share at least one of the world’s 256 transboundary river and lake basins. In an age of rapid development and climate change, the equitable and sustainable management of precious natural resources such as water are essential to global food security, economic development, and to reducing poverty.

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SAFEGUARDING THE BLUE PLANET – EIGHT RECOMMENDATIONS TO SUSTAINABLY USE AND GOVERN THE OCEAN AND ITS RESOURCES

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Climate is Water

Presently, two billion people around the world are living in water-stressed areas, and the same will be true of more than half the world’s population by 2050 if no action is taken. Based on projected demand, the world will face a 40 per cent shortfall in freshwater supply within 10 years.

Climate change is already greatly exacerbating the world water crisis – intensifying floods, prolonging droughts, and more. In many ways, the worst impacts of the climate crisis will be felt through water. Unless urgent action is taken, these impacts will only worsen in the coming years and decades.

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Special report: collaborating for sustainable change to achieve 2030 goals

The ultimate deep dive into ocean challenges and opportunities for collective action, from our March 2022 event

 

Towards Responsible and Informed Ocean-Based Carbon Dioxide Removal: Research and Governance Priorities

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Starting Your Water Journey

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The Global Sustainable Aquaculture Roadmap: Pathways for Systemic Change

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Global action on water: less rhetoric and more science

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Life below water – Tackling plastic pollution through creativity and critical thinking

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Reducing Ocean Pollution for Climate adaptation and Mitigation – A Project Report

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UN delegates reach historic agreement on protecting marine biodiversity in international waters

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The Ocean as a Solution to Climate Change: Updated Opportunities for Action

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It is time to rethink the way that we govern our oceans.

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Fair and inclusive decision-making for a healthy ocean whereby people and planet flourish

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