Un Treaty to Protect 30pc of Oceans by 2030 Takes Effect
- The agreement envisages creation of ‘marine protected areas’ in the hitherto unregulated water
- 80 Countries have ratifiedit; US yet to do so
Un Treaty to Protect 30pc of Oceans by 2030 Takes Effect
A landmarks global treaty to safeguard biodiversity in the high seas
came into effect on Saturday, Providing countries with a legally binding
framework to tackle threats such as overfishing and meet a target to protect 30
per cent of the ocean environment by 2030.
The UN treaty, also known as Biodiversity beyond National
Jurisdiction (BBNJ), was finalized in March 2023 after 15 years of
negotiations, and will allow the creation of a global network of “marine protected
areas” in vast and previously unregulated ocean ecosystems lying in
international waters.
“It’s two-thirds of the Ocean, (and) it’s half the surface of the
planet that for the first time will have a comprehensive legal regime,” Adam
McCarthy, and official at the Australian foreign ministry and co-chair of the
treaty’s preparatory committee, told a media briefing.
The treaty reached the threshold of 60 national ratifications on
Sep 19 last years, meaning that I would go formally into operation within 120
days. The number of ratification, including Britain and Australia, are expected
to follow soon. The United States signed the treaty during the previous
administration, but as not yet ratified it.
“whilst we only needed 60 for it to enter into force, obviously it’s
really critical for its implementation and for it to be as effective as
possible for us to achieve global or universal ratification of the treaty,”
High Seas Alliance Member Quote
Said Rebeca Hubbard, director of the High Seas Allians, a coalition
of environmental group.
Under the treaty, countries must conduct environmental assessments of
activities that have an impact on ocean ecology. It will also create mechanisms
allowing nations to share spoils of the “blue economy” including “marine
genetic resources” used in industries such as biotechnology.
30 BY 30 TARGET
Environmentalists say more
than 190,000 protected areas would need to be established in order to meet the “30
by 30” target to bring 30pc of the oceans under formal protection by 2030. Currently,
only about eight per cent, or 29 million square kilometers (11.2 Million square
miles), is protected.
But the treaty will have litter impact on what some
conservationists identify as one of the greatest threats facing the marine environment
– the clamour to extract mineral resoucres
resources from the ocean bed.

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