Major obstacles remain in the way of protecting 30% of Earth's oceans
A dead dolphin lies on a beach of the Atlantic Ocean near Lacanau, southwestern France, March 22, 2019. (AFP Photo)


Aiming to save marine ecosystems under threat from overfishing, pollution and climate change, the question at the heart of a global forum in Canada is thus: How does the world go from protecting only 8% of marine areas to 30% in less than ten years?

On the heels of the historic biodiversity agreement signed at COP15 in Montreal late last year, about 3,000 officials, scientists, NGOs and Indigenous groups are meeting in Vancouver for the fifth International Marine Protected Areas Congress (IMPAC5), which opened Friday and runs until Feb. 9.

Scientists have said the meeting is crucial for setting up a framework to reach the agreed target at COP15 of protecting 30% of the planet's lands and oceans by 2030.

It's a big step for ocean conservation, which will see a tripling of areas made off-limits to most human activities, to preserve sensitive ecosystems and species at risk.

Usually held every four years, the summit occurs two years late due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

"We must re-think our policies, economies, priorities, and processes in ways that reflect the important role nature plays in our health, equity, well-being and economic sustainability," said host Canada, which has some of the world's longest coastlines.

Covering almost three-quarters of the earth's surface, oceans are home to a quarter of known species and absorb 30% CO2 emissions from human activities.

"COP15 marked a historic inflection point in conservation efforts for nature ... but the pressure is on now not just to reach the numerical target, but to make sure that we do it right, that our marine protected areas are in the right places (and) that they're managed well," Pepe Clarke of the World Wide Fund For Nature (WWF) told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Some experts fear the "politics of figures."

Resistance to climate change

Biodiversity hotspots or particularly vulnerable areas that deserve urgent conservation measures have been identified, scientists have said.

It is essential to have discussions to "establish a global network, ecologically representative and which adequately protects the whole range of ecosystem types," according to Clarke.

Especially since protecting and managing our oceans more sustainably will make them more resistant to climate change.

But even if the world achieves "the ambitious target of protecting 30% of the oceans by 2030 within high-quality (marine protected areas), the goals of the framework cannot be fully met without appropriate management of the other 70% of the oceans," said the Pew Charitable Trusts, a non-profit.

For Sian Owen, director of the Deep Sea Conservation Coalition (DSCC), "it is crucial that both existing and emerging industries that threaten our deep ocean are quickly and unequivocally rejected and that we sustainably manage the remaining 70%."

United Nations member states will meet again at the end of February to try and hammer out a treaty for protecting the high seas, a session that should, in principle, be the last.

Protecting international waters, which cover nearly half the planet, is crucial for the health of the entire ocean and its biodiversity and limiting global warming.

"Governments must restrict activities that destroy and disturb vital ecosystems that support life on Earth," said DSCC.