Ngozi Oguguah
BBC
International Union for Conservation and Nature
Laura Meller
can be better shared. This is the biological materials from plants, animals and other organisms that live under the sea, which are used to make medicines, cosmetics, food supplements and more.
The legally-binding pact is a big deal because until now, only around one per cent of international waters have been protected — pretty wild considering these waters make up two-thirds of the world’s oceans.
International waters — or the high seas — don’t fall under any state’s jurisdiction, which means every man and his dog are allowed to fish, ship and conduct scientific research in them. This big free-for-all endangers heaps of the marine life chilling out in the high seas, leaving them defenceless against climate change, overfishing and ships getting all up in their grill.
Chief research officer at the Nigerian Institute of Oceanography and Marine Research said the two major causes of extinction are overfishing and pollution.
“If we have marine protected sanctuaries most of the marine resources will have time to recover,” she said, per the .
According to the , that bloody bastard known as “climate change” is affecting at least 41 per cent of threatened marine species.
Greenpeace said the “30 by 30” target will only be reached if 11 million square kilometres of international waters are placed under protection.
“Countries must formally adopt the treaty and ratify it as quickly as possible to bring it into force, and then deliver the fully protected ocean sanctuaries our planet needs,” Greenpeace oceans campaigner said.
“The clock is still ticking to deliver 30 by 30. We have half a decade left, and we can’t be complacent.”
UN conference chair said the treaty will be formally adopted after it’s been assessed by lawyers and translated into the UN’s six official languages.
Rena Lee1/8 : Governments @UN have just agreed on a Global Ocean Treaty!
— Greenpeace International (@Greenpeace) March 5, 2023
This is huge – it’s the biggest conservation victory ever!
Here’s a on how we got here and what it means: pic.twitter.com/kHiv3DOIer
The post In A Major Win For Turtles, The UN Has Agreed On A Treaty To Protect 30% Of The World’s Oceans appeared first on PEDESTRIAN.TV .