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UNEP
World Environment Day Message
by Klaus Toepfer, Executive Director of UNEP
Wanted!
Seas and Oceans: Dead or Alive?
5 June 2004
Seen
from space, our planet is blue, testament to the oceans
that cover 70 per cent of its surface. We know this
because of the billions of dollars that have been spent in
recent decades exploring our solar system and beyond. The
irony of this continuing passion for exploring humanity’s
place in the universe is that there is a neglected and
largely unknown frontier here on Earth about which we know
too little. Earth’s seas and oceans remain largely a
mystery. Sixty per cent of the planet is covered by ocean
more than a mile deep, the vast majority of which is
unexplored.
Yet,
our ignorance is not preventing our blind exploitation of
what we are increasingly learning is a fragile and finite
resource. More than 70 per cent of the world’s marine
fisheries are now fished up to or beyond their sustainable
limit. Across the world, diners are finding new species
of fish on menus as traditional fare becomes ever more
scarce, while artisanal fishing communities, who harvest
half the world’s fish catch, are seeing their livelihoods
increasingly threatened by illegal, unregulated or
subsidized commercial fleets. At the same time,
needlessly destructive fishing practices are killing
hundreds of thousands of marine species each year and
helping to destroy important undersea habitats.
Another threat to marine life and to human health and
livelihoods is pollution. Eighty per cent of all
pollution in the seas comes from land-based activities.
Three-quarters of the world’s megacities are located by
the sea, and 40 per cent of the world’s population now
lives within 60 kilometres of a coast. Death and disease
caused by polluted coastal waters costs the global economy
$12.8 billion a year.
The
annual economic impact of hepatitis from tainted seafood
alone is $7.2 billion. But it is not just coastal
dwellers and industries that pollute the oceans. Rivers
that run into the sea carry silt, untreated sewage,
industrial waste and the assorted rubbish of consumers
from far inland. Each year tons of discarded plastic
products find their way into the oceans, killing hundreds
of thousands of marine mammals and ocean-going birds, and
untold numbers of fish. This waste is not only deadly, it
is persistent. Animals killed by plastic waste decompose,
but the plastic does not. Instead it remains in the
ecosystem to kill again and again.
Also
adding to the ocean’s woes are surplus agricultural
fertilizers which, when washed downstream, are creating a
growing number of coastal dead zones where algal blooms
regularly consume all the oxygen in the water. Then there
is global warming, which is raising sea levels and
temperatures. Climate change threatens to destroy the
majority of the world’s coral reefs, wreak havoc on the
fragile economies of small island developing states, and
devastate the lives of billions of people who live within
range of the increasingly fierce and frequent storms,
hurricanes and typhoons that are battering coasts
worldwide.
All
this adds up to a picture of an ecosystem in crisis. That
is why UNEP chose Wanted! Seas and Oceans: Dead or Alive?
as the theme for World Environment Day 2004. The message
is simple. We have a choice: act now to save our marine
resources, or watch as the rich diversity of life in our
seas and oceans declines beyond the point of recovery.
The
good news is that not only is there increasing global
awareness of the crisis facing our seas and oceans, there
is growing commitment to do something about it. A series
of time-bound targets were agreed by governments at the
World Summit on Sustainable Development to improve
fisheries management and develop an ecosystem approach to
the sustainable development of the seas and oceans
including the establishment of a representative network of
marine protected areas and a regular process for reporting
on and assessing the state of the marine environment.
These
targets complement the internationally agreed development
goals contained in the Millennium Declaration. Reducing
hunger and poverty, and improving the health, education
and opportunities of people especially women and children
throughout the world will go a long way to reducing the
burden on the seas and oceans.
UNEP
is a key player in many of the mechanisms whereby these
goals will be achieved. As well as participating in
preparations for the Global Marine Assessment, UNEP has,
in the past year, helped alert the global community about
the role and status of crucial marine habitats such as
seagrass beds, mangroves and cold- and warm-water corals,
and the importance of increasing marine protected areas
coverage from the current figure of less than one half a
per cent of seas and oceans. These habitats will also
benefit from the growing strength of the UNEP Global
Programme of Action for the Protection of the Marine
Environment from Land-based Activities (GPA) and the UNEP-supported
network of regional seas programmes and action plans.
However, none of the many plans for the restoration and
sustainable use of the world’s seas and oceans will
succeed without the active support of all sectors of
society. Each year World Environment Day provides an
opportunity for individuals, communities, businesses,
industries and local and national governments to focus on
the world’s environmental challenges. This year the
spotlight is on seas and oceans. Dead or alive? It’s our
choice.
Source: www.unep.org
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