Global economy to lose billions without action to stop ocean acidification, UN report warns
Friday, 10 October 2014 | 00:00
The
global economy could be losing as much as $1 trillion annually by the
end of the century if countries do not take urgent steps to stop ocean
acidification, says a United Nations report launched today in
Pyeongchang, Republic of Korea (ROK).This figure reflects the
economic loss for industries linked to coral reefs alone, which are some
of the most vulnerable species to this phenomenon. The overall
financial and environmental costs are still uncertain, states the
report, An Updated Synthesis of the Impacts of Ocean Acidification on
Marine Biodiversity, issued in Pyeongchang by the Convention on
Biological Diversity (CBD) at the 12th meeting of the Conference of the
Parties to the CBD (COP-12).
“When ecosystems stop delivering the
way they should, they essentially deliver less services and less
benefits. In the case of coral reefs, those systems are essential for
people’s livelihoods in many regions of the world and they will be
significantly affected,” said Salvatore Arico, who acts as the principal
focal point on biodiversity and policy at the UN Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
Ocean
acidification is the ongoing decrease in the pH of the Earth’s oceans,
caused by a drastic increase in carbon dioxide emissions due to human
activity. The report stresses that this phenomenon is occurring at
unprecedented levels, threatening marine biodiversity and ultimately
human society.
Higher acidity makes it harder for marine
organisms like corals to calcify their shells and skeletons, which
disturbs the balance of the entire ecosystem. For example, pteropods,
which act as the “potato chips of the sea” because lots of organisms
feed on them, are important in lots of food webs, but are severely
threatened by ocean acidification.
The report, which was put
together by a team of 30 international experts led by UK scientists,
finds that ocean acidification has increased by around 26 per cent since
pre-industrial times, and will continue to increase in the next 50 to
100 years, drastically affecting marine organisms and ecosystems as well
as the goods and services they provide.
“While $1 trillion may
sound like a huge figure, but we need to consider the benefits derived
from marine biodiversity to many major industries,” Mr. Arico said in an
interview. “Ocean acidification will greatly affect food security in
the coming years, as well as tourism and other industries such as the
pharmaceutical industry which relies on many marine organisms.”
While
reversing ocean acidification is impossible at this stage, it is still
possible to reduce the rate of CO2 emissions and eventually halt them.
“The
main challenge is to link the current knowledge on ocean acidification
with the post-Kyoto negotiations on climate change,” Mr. Arico said,
referring to the negotiations to be held by the UN Framework Convention
on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Lima, Peru later this year, and in Paris,
France, in 2015. “It would be really very useful if ocean acidification
be taken into account in the context of these negotiations because it
would inform the ultimate decisions by governments.”
Source: United Nations