AOA calls on CCAMLR to agree on marine protection of the Ross Sea and East Antarctica “Opportunity for global leadership and lasting legacy”
HOBART, Australia, 20 October 2014 – As representatives of the 25 Members[1] of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) meet in Hobart, where they will decide the fate of two key protection proposals in the Ross Sea and East Antarctica, the Antarctic Ocean Alliance (AOA) called on the member countries to honour their conservation commitments and finally agree to lasting and significant Southern Ocean protection.
A joint US-NZ proposal to designate a Ross Sea marine protected area (MPA) of 1.32 million km2 (with 1.25 million km2 area proposed as “no take”) is under consideration. The Ross Sea, is often referred to as “The Last Ocean” due to its status as one of the most pristine oceans remaining on earth.
Australia, France and the EU are once again proposing an MPA to protect 1.2 million km2 of East Antarctic waters. Their proposal would allow for exploratory and research activities within the MPA if they are consistent with the maintenance of the MPA’s objectives.
Both MPA proposals have undergone a number of iterations, and several compromises have been made (please see map infographic attached). The international NGO members of AOA recommend immediate designation of both proposals rather than risk further erosion.
“During the past three CCAMLR meetings, we have hoped for action on marine protection in Antarctica’s waters, protection that CCAMLR promised to put in place by 2012. Instead we have seen three years of inaction,” said Mark Epstein, Executive Director of the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition. “While this meeting provides another opportunity for global leaders to live up to their overdue commitments, the time is now for action on marine protection. “
“If CCAMLR truly wishes to protect the biodiversity of the Southern Ocean, it cannot wait any longer,” said Andrea Kavanagh, who directs The Pew Charitable Trusts’ efforts to protect penguins and the Southern Ocean. “At the height of the Cold War, the international community came together to protect the Antarctic, when no one thought it possible. CCAMLR has an opportunity to repeat this success, by making good on its commitment to protect Antarctica’s ocean, and rising above the geopolitical jousting that is stalling the creation of real, meaningful marine protections in the Ross Sea and East Antarctica.”
The Southern Ocean is home to more than 10,000 unique species including most of the world’s penguins, whales, seabirds, colossal squid and the commercially targeted Antarctic toothfish.
The Antarctic Ocean Alliance is delivering to CCAMLR 33 delegates a recent report highlighting a small sample of the thousands of resilient species that call the pristine Southern Ocean home. The new report, “33 Species We Love and Must Protect” serves as a symbolic reminder that in order to continue research and discovery in Antarctica and protect many vulnerable and unique species, there must be commitment to preservation through enhanced protection.
“Antarctica is one of the world’s last untouched wildernesses and is critical for scientific research, both for studying how intact marine ecosystems function and for monitoring the impacts of climate change,” said Bob Zuur, manager of WWF’s Antarctica program. “A network of large-scale, permanent marine protected areas in the Ross Sea and East Antarctica would build on the spirit of political cooperation in the Antarctic Treaty and create a lasting legacy for future generations.”
“MPAs and fully-protected marine reserves are the single most powerful tool that CCAMLR has for fulfilling its mandate and protecting the astounding array of Antarctica’s marine life and enabling the Southern Ocean ecosystem to best withstand the impacts of climate change and ocean acidification,” added Richard Page, Greenpeace Oceans Campaigner
The Commission, the consensus-based body made up of 24 countries and the European Union, will have another opportunity to create two large-scale Southern Ocean MPAs when they once again convene in Hobart, Tasmania, in October 2014. The proposals up for discussion would establish reserves in the waters of the Ross Sea and East Antarctica and if agreed upon, would create some of the world’s largest MPAs.
The Antarctic Ocean Alliance partners will attend the CCAMLR meeting in Hobart, working to ensure CCAMLR delegates step up to the challenge and designate the Ross Sea and East Antarctica proposals.
www.antarcticocean.org
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The Antarctic Ocean Alliance is a coalition of high-profile individuals and some 30 leading environmental groups. These include The Pew Charitable Trusts, Greenpeace, WWF, Humane Society International, the Antarctic and Southern Ocean Coalition (ASOC), The Blue Marine Foundation (UK), Mission Blue (US), Oceans 5 (US), Deep Wave (Germany), Whale and Dolphin Conservation (Germany), The Last Ocean, the Korean Federation for Environmental Movement (KFEM), Greenovation Hub (China), Forest & Bird (NZ), ECO (NZ), Friends of the Earth Japan and associate partners the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), Oceana, the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) and Ocean Planet (Australia).
• International experts in Hobart to plan Antarctic marine future
Lieutenant Governor of Tasmania, His Excellency The Honourable Chief Justice Alan Blow OAM, will today open the thirty-third meeting of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR).
Over the next ten days, 25 delegations, with some 240 marine scientists, resource managers and policy makers from around the world, will continue the work of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) which started 34 years ago when the Commission first met in Hobart. This year the Commission will review past decisions and consider new measures to conserve and manage marine ecosystems in the Southern Ocean.
As a side benefit from this meeting, an estimated A$1.5 million will flow into the Hobart economy through accommodation, meals and tourism.
CCAMLR is a consensus-based organisation. This does not mean that all members of the Commission must necessarily wholeheartedly agree with a proposal but that, for a decision to be adopted, no member blocks agreement. This makes reaching consensus paramount and negotiations can go long into the night.
‘Every Member has an equal say, regardless of the extent of the interest a nation might have in the Southern Ocean,’ says Chair of the Commission, Mr Leszek Dybiec (Poland).
This annual Commission meeting considers scientific data and recommendations from its specialist groups, which meet throughout the year.
Chair of the Scientific Committee, Dr Christopher Jones (United States), emphasised that ‘CCAMLR practises an ecosystem-based approach to conservation and management of marine living resources in the Southern Ocean, and this week CCAMLR’s Scientific Committee is meeting to provide the best available scientific advice to assist the Commission in their decision making’.
This year’s CCAMLR meetings will concentrate on:
• Marine Protected Area (MPA) proposals in East Antarctica and the Ross Sea
• initiatives to assess and reduce illegal fishing in the Southern Ocean such as inspections and vessel monitoring
• setting catch limits for krill, toothfish and other finfish species
• setting catch limits for research fisheries that will support improved scientific knowledge.
Two MPA proposals have been submitted to the Commission for consideration. One jointly submitted by Australia, the European Union and France covers an area of 1 million km2 in East Antarctica The other one, submitted by New Zealand and the United States covers 1.3 million km2 in the Ross Sea Each of these proposals has the potential to establish the world’s largest MPA.
Media representatives are invited to attend the opening of the Commission on 20 October at 9:00am, to be held at CCAMLR headquarters, 181 Macquarie Street, Hobart, Australia. Media will then be excused until a media briefing at 10:30am.
What is CCAMLR?
• The Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources
• Established by an international treaty in 1982
• Its objective is the conservation of Antarctic marine life while providing for rational use
• 25 Members and a further 11 countries have signed the Convention
• The Secretariat (international headquarters) is at 181 Macquarie Street, Hobart, Australia
• Further information, including a five minute video outlining the work of CCAMLR: www.ccamlr.org/node/12769