A new UN agreement on global ocean conservation has been welcomed as a “landmark” deal by Tánaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs Micheál Martin.
Minister for Housing, Local Government and Heritage Darragh O’Brien and Minister of State for Heritage and Electoral Reform Malcolm Noonan have also hailed the agreement, concluded in New York on Saturday.
As Afloat reported earlier, the” Agreement on Marine Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction” (BBNJ) is described as providing a framework for global action to protect the high seas, which comprise two thirds of oceans and half the surface area of the planet.
The high seas is a marine area which by definition, falls outside the jurisdiction of any one country.
Tánaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs Micheál Martin
The agreement will provide for the creation of a global network of “high seas marine protected areas”, and will “strengthen processes for environmental impact assessments for activities that may impact the marine environment”, the UN says.
“This is a major step forward for ocean conservation,” Martin said.
“ Currently, only 1% of the high seas are protected, which is far short of the globally agreed target of 30%,” Martin said in a joint statement.
“ The agreement provides mechanisms to significantly improve the protection of the marine environment, and Ireland is committed to working with the international community to realise its full potential,”he said.
O’Brien said that “coupled with the Government’s forthcoming marine protected areas legislation, this landmark agreement provides us with the tools we need for the protection and restoration of marine biodiversity”.
He said it was “ in line with the recently agreed Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework under the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, and to deliver on UN Sustainable Development Goal 14 (Life below Water).”
Noonan said it “marks further good news for our marine environment and reflects positive global momentum to protect our oceans and seas”.
“We will continue to play our part in efforts to protect our oceans against the growing impacts of climate change and human activities on our oceans,”he added.
The BBNJ Agreement is shorthand for the “ agreement under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on the conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction)”.
It was agreed on March 4th 2023 by an intergovernmental conference convened by the UN General Assembly.
It marks the culmination of work which began in 2004 to develop a new international agreement to address marine conservation in the high seas and deep seabed.
In addition to its provisions on marine protected areas and environmental impact assessments, the agreement sets out arrangements for capacity building measures to assist developing countries in achieving the aims of the agreement.
The agreement also contains provisions addressing benefit-sharing relating to marine genetic resources.
The ministers said that Ireland “played an active role in the negotiations as part of the EU negotiating team”.
The UN deal will be subject to national ratification procedures.