NICE, France — An international agreement on protecting the world’s oceans could
soon enter into force as French President Emmanuel Macron announced Monday that
enough countries have “formally committed” to ratifying the so-called High Seas
Treaty.
“While the Earth is warming, the ocean is boiling,” Macron said. “Our scientists
are telling us things we could never have imagined: heat waves in the very heart
of our oceans. And as the sea rises, in addition to fire, submersion is on the
horizon.”
The ocean generates more than half of the planet’s oxygen and absorbs 30 percent
of all carbon dioxide emissions. But with marine and coastal ecosystems facing
multiple threats — including the impact of climate change as well as pressures
from fishing and pollution — that could all change. Ocean oxygen content is
decreasing globally, according to a 2024 UNESCO report, and ocean warming is
happening at an unprecedented and accelerating rate.
“The ocean is our greatest ally, whether you live here in Europe, or anywhere in
the world,” said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. “But if we
neglect the ocean, if we treat it without respect, it will turn against us,” she
added, pointing to the “ever more violent storms [that] ravage our coasts.”
Macron and von der Leyen spoke at the third United Nations Conference on the
Oceans (UNOC) in Nice, France, where delegations from more than 120 countries,
including more than 50 heads of state and government, are gathered in an attempt
to resuscitate the world’s long-suffering oceans.
The High Seas Treaty — or the the Agreement on the Conservation and Sustainable
Use of Marine Biodiversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ), as it’s
officially known — sets standards for the creation of marine protected areas in
international waters, among other measures. It can only be implemented once at
least 60 countries have officially ratified it.
The agreement will, supporters hope, go a long way toward protecting 30 percent
of the planet’s lands and seas by 2030 as foreseen in the COP15 biodiversity
agreement reached in December.
Thanks to 15 countries which have newly “formally committed to joining” — on top
of the 50 or so ratifications already submitted — the High Seas Treaty will soon
be implemented, Macron said Monday morning.
“So that’s a win,” he said.
OUR GREATEST ALLY
The French president was flanked by von der Leyen, Brazilian President Luiz
Inácio Lula da Silva, Secretary-General of the United Nations António Guterres
and Costa Rica President Rodrigo Chaves, who is cohosting the conference.
“The sea is our first ally against global warming ,” Macron said in his opening
speech.
“Today, we are inches away from the 60 signatures for ratification,” said von
der Leyen. “So to bring the High Seas Treaty to life, Europe will contribute €40
million to the Global Ocean Programme. So I ask you all today: Please speed up
ratification, because our ocean needs us to play [our] part.”
The EU ratified the treaty last month. Lula, in his own opening speech Monday,
announced that Brazil would also soon be ratifying the treaty.
Environmental groups are encouraged by Macron’s announcement, which follows
weeks of speculation over whether the 60-country threshold for ratification
would be reached in Nice.
“Countries have finally stopped dragging their feet and it is hoped we can now
move forward with protection of one of the most important areas for biodiversity
on Earth — the high seas,” said Catherine Weller, global policy director for
Fauna & Flora.
“We now need those countries that have committed to ratification to get the
final technicalities over the line — and then the real work needs to begin,” she
added.
Weller urged leaders to follow “best practices” in designing connected networks
of “high-quality, well-managed” marine protected areas. They should safeguard
the migratory routes of critically endangered species like whales and sharks,
for example.
ELEPHANT (NOT) IN THE ROOM
The United States is conspicuous in its absence from Nice, having decided to
skip the conference, as reported by POLITICO last week. A State Department
spokesperson said the conference is “at odds” with positions held by the current
U.S. administration.
The conference, which ends Friday, is an opportunity for countries to discuss
and present new agreements on topics from environmental financing and deep-sea
mining to illegal fishing and bottom-trawling.
The summit aims to promote enduring uses of ocean resources — one of 17
sustainable development goals held by the United Nations. But the Trump
administration has rejected those goals, calling them “inconsistent with U.S.
sovereignty.”
Macron took a dig at the absent delegation, flaunting a new scientific program
aimed at exploring the world’s oceans — the “Neptune Mission” — while the U.S.
schemes to send astronauts to plant its flag on Mars.
“Rather than rushing off to Mars, let’s already get to know our final frontier
and our best friend, the ocean,” said Macron.
Tag - Deep-sea fishing
Costas Kadis has a delicate task: protect the health of Europe’s ocean life,
while also serving the needs of the fishing industry. Often these two interests
are diametrically opposed.
A biologist by background, Kadis (we can assume) has a deep understanding of
ocean biodiversity. This came across in his response to answers, in which he
pledged not to sacrifice ocean health for the short-term interest of the fishing
sector.
But how exactly does he intend to tread this fine line? That’s a core question
members of the European Parliament’s fisheries committee will grill him on
today.
There’s also another issue hanging over Kadis. As a POLITICO investigation
recently revealed, Kadis was Cyprus’ environment minister when the country was
being investigated over a waste scandal, in which EU funding was provided for a
waste treatment project that the Cypriot government knew could not deliver on
its promises.
While Kadis was not implicated in the scandal itself, questions remain over his
handling of the fallout over the five years that he was environment minister.