A new international agreement is
            needed to police the exploitation of the deep ocean because of the rising
            threats of deep-sea mining and bottom trawling for fish, say scientists. Speakers
            at a symposium this month (16 February) urged the UN to negotiate a new treaty
            for the deep ocean to supplement the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
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The symposium took place at the
            annual meeting of the AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of
            Science) in Chicago, United States.
“This is an opportunity for
            scientists to voice their concerns about mounting human impacts on the
            once-remote deep ocean to those who have the power in their hands to make the
            changes,” says Kristina Gjerde, high seas policy advisor for the International
            Union for Conservation of Nature.
The deep sea makes up about
            two-thirds of the world’s oceans. It begins at a depth of around 200 meters,
            both within and beyond zones of national jurisdiction.
But “imminent” mining and bottom
            trawling for fish threaten deep-sea environments, said the scientists at the
            meeting.
“We’re calling for a new treaty to
            sew the gaps in international law that don’t currently include biodiversity,
            conservation, marine genetic resources, capacity development and technology transfer for areas beyond national jurisdiction,” says Gjerde. 
The UN-sanctioned International Seabed Authority (ISA) was
            established in 1994 to regulate mineral extraction from the deep seabed outside
            national zones of jurisdiction. The ISA, based in Jamaica, has so far approved
            19 mineral prospecting licenses in the deep ocean around the world for
            companies and government bodies, including China and India, as well as those
            sponsored by the Pacific island nations of Kiribati, Nauru and Tonga [See map].
            The Cook Islands have also applied to explore deep-sea mining opportunities. 
But the ISA does not regulate marine
            genetic resources, which could be valuable to the medical and pharmaceutical
            sectors, or biodiversity conservation, says Lisa Levin, director of the Center
            for Marine Biodiversity  Conservation at the Scripps Institution of
            Oceanography, United States.
“The problem is that the ISA’s mandate is to facilitate
            the extraction of minerals. They don’t have a mandate to identify which parts
            of the sea floor are most critical to ecosystem health in the ocean,” says
            Linwood Pendleton, senior scholar in the Ocean and Coastal Policy Program at
            Duke University, United States.
The new treaty would ensure that
            financial gains made from marine genetic resources are shared between all
            nations, and that new mechanisms are developed to transfer marine technology
            and develop capacity in this field, says Gjerde.
Read more at ENN affiliate SciDevNet.
Deep-sea
            image via Shutterstock.



