UNITED NATIONS: The world’s first international treaty to protect the high seas was adopted on Monday at the United Nations, a landmark environmental accord designed to protect remote ecosystems vital to humanity.

Secretary General Antonio Guterres hailed as a “historic achievement” the treaty that will establish a legal framework to extend swathes of environmental protections to international waters, which make up more than 60 percent of the world’s oceans.

Following more than 15 years of discussions, including four years of formal negotiations, UN member states finally agreed on the text for the treaty in March after a flurry of final, marathon talks.

The text, since frozen, has been pored over by the UN’s lawyers and translators to make sure it matches in the body’s six official languages.

Accord designed to protect ecosystems vital to humanity

“Healthy oceans, from coastal waters to remote high seas and deep seabed areas, are integral to human health, wellbeing, and survival,” a group of scientists noted in The Lancet journal.

Scientists have increasingly come to realize the importance of oceans, which produce most of the oxygen we breathe, limit climate change by absorbing CO2, and host rich areas of biodiversity, often at the microscopic level.

But with so much of the world’s oceans lying outside of individual countries’ exclusive economic zones, and thus the jurisdiction of any single state, providing protection for the so-called “high seas” requires international cooperation.

Marine reserves

The result is that they’ve been long ignored in many environmental fights, as the spotlight has been on coastal areas and a few emblematic species.

A key tool in the treaty will be the ability to create protected marine areas in international waters. Currently, only about one per cent of the high seas are protected by any sort of conservation measures.

The treaty is seen as crucial to countries protecting 30pc of the world’s oceans and lands by 2030, as agreed by world governments in a separate historic accord reached in Montreal in December.

After the adoption, “then the race to ratification will begin” and the 30pc target “will remain within reach,” said Chris Thorne of Greenpeace.

The treaty, officially known as the treaty on “Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction” or BBNJ, also introduces requirements to carry out environmental impact studies for proposed activities to be carried out in international waters.

Such activities, while not listed in the text, would include anything from fishing and maritime transport to more controversial pursuits, like deep-sea mining or even geo-engineering programmes aimed at fighting global warming.

Published in Dawn, June 20th, 2023

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