The Pacific Ocean is the largest on the planet. It's also beset by huge problems.
Now, at last, the scientific community is speaking with a single voice about the best ways to address the threats and preserve a healthy Pacific.
More than 400 leading scientists from nearly two-dozen countries have signed a consensus statement on the major threats facing the Pacific Ocean. The threats identified as the most serious and pervasive include overfishing, pollution, habitat destruction and climate change.
“This is first time the scientific community has come together in a single voice to express urgency over the environmental crisis facing the Pacific Ocean,” according to Meg Caldwell, executive director of the Center for Ocean Solutions, who will present the statement on Wednesday to government officials gathered at the World Ocean Conference 2009 in Manado, Indonesia.
These threats affect all members of the Pacific Ocean community, said Stephen Palumbi, director of Stanford University’s Hopkins Marine Station and one of the principal organizers of the consensus statement. Now, says Biliana Cicin-Sain, a professor of marine policy at the University of Delaware and coordinator of the Global Forum on Oceans, Coasts and Islands, Pacific nations have a roadmap by which they can chart "a new course of policy for the Pacific region." In the consensus statement, the scientists warn that if left unchecked, the cumulative impacts of overfishing, pollution and habitat destruction—exacerbated by climate change—could have devastating consequences for coastal economies, food supplies, public health and political stability.
The consensus statement was largely based on a synthesis of more than 3,400 scientific papers
on the threats and impacts to the Pacific prepared by the Monterey, Calif.-based Center for Ocean Solutions -- a collaboration among Stanford University, the Monterey Bay Aquarium and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.
The center focuses on finding practical, enduring solutions to major challenges facing the oceans.
More than 400 leading scientists from nearly two-dozen countries have signed a consensus statement on the major threats facing the Pacific Ocean.
Posted by: Qureshishifa | May 09, 2011 at 05:12 AM
This is positive news indeed that there is a consensus message to be delivered, I just hope it finds receptive, and responsive ears to hear it.
Posted by: Doug | May 14, 2009 at 01:19 PM