Dubai Telegraph - UN resuming talks on high-seas treaty amid growing concerns

EUR -
AED 4.291758
AFN 74.202607
ALL 95.815209
AMD 433.445389
ANG 2.091694
AOA 1072.792813
ARS 1638.40494
AUD 1.632378
AWG 2.106437
AZN 1.993295
BAM 1.953301
BBD 2.354015
BDT 143.435854
BGN 1.949377
BHD 0.441035
BIF 3476.643619
BMD 1.16862
BND 1.490992
BOB 8.106627
BRL 5.827203
BSD 1.168769
BTN 111.100842
BWP 15.865699
BYN 3.30597
BYR 22904.946195
BZD 2.351092
CAD 1.591993
CDF 2706.523045
CHF 0.916449
CLF 0.027111
CLP 1067.031657
CNY 7.981964
CNH 7.983998
COP 4357.140135
CRC 531.417756
CUC 1.16862
CUP 30.968422
CVE 110.609481
CZK 24.399786
DJF 207.686974
DKK 7.472353
DOP 69.651316
DZD 154.742285
EGP 62.555716
ERN 17.529296
ETB 183.560937
FJD 2.570728
FKP 0.860363
GBP 0.864037
GEL 3.137759
GGP 0.860363
GHS 13.082739
GIP 0.860363
GMD 85.884964
GNF 10257.560439
GTQ 8.932774
GYD 244.537105
HKD 9.156638
HNL 31.12043
HRK 7.533505
HTG 152.963517
HUF 365.308206
IDR 20369.684178
ILS 3.440411
IMP 0.860363
INR 111.377167
IQD 1530.891812
IRR 1536734.911165
ISK 143.401016
JEP 0.860363
JMD 184.134393
JOD 0.828519
JPY 183.752009
KES 150.962307
KGS 102.161318
KHR 4688.502378
KMF 491.41186
KPW 1051.757731
KRW 1723.888782
KWD 0.359981
KYD 0.974154
KZT 542.216212
LAK 25665.809059
LBP 104476.037875
LKR 373.498897
LRD 214.587827
LSL 19.66788
LTL 3.45063
LVL 0.706886
LYD 7.403239
MAD 10.80627
MDL 20.12425
MGA 4855.614784
MKD 61.623628
MMK 2453.808931
MNT 4179.773496
MOP 9.431632
MRU 46.686663
MUR 54.645088
MVR 18.060971
MWK 2035.157276
MXN 20.475164
MYR 4.630655
MZN 74.68652
NAD 19.668118
NGN 1602.095525
NIO 42.911641
NOK 10.849156
NPR 177.759268
NZD 1.992245
OMR 0.449344
PAB 1.169004
PEN 4.097227
PGK 5.063043
PHP 72.127425
PKR 325.753226
PLN 4.257591
PYG 7266.701961
QAR 4.257292
RON 5.192639
RSD 117.376262
RUB 87.646253
RWF 1706.769077
SAR 4.384889
SBD 9.379188
SCR 16.184988
SDG 701.747774
SEK 10.872329
SGD 1.49224
SHP 0.872493
SLE 28.806613
SLL 24505.366399
SOS 667.868137
SRD 43.771819
STD 24188.068435
STN 24.716307
SVC 10.228868
SYP 129.161674
SZL 19.667847
THB 38.284118
TJS 10.941999
TMT 4.096012
TND 3.372059
TOP 2.813756
TRY 52.841014
TTD 7.939841
TWD 36.940654
TZS 3032.568437
UAH 51.507494
UGX 4386.505198
USD 1.16862
UYU 47.07976
UZS 14021.099238
VES 571.388131
VND 30770.925421
VUV 138.807225
WST 3.173023
XAF 655.118749
XAG 0.015983
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.158254
XCG 2.106904
XDR 0.812927
XOF 652.677815
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.861871
ZAR 19.640877
ZMK 10518.970289
ZMW 21.889991
ZWL 376.295068
  • RBGPF

    1.6000

    64.7

    +2.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    16.33

    -0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.9800

    87.5

    -1.12%

  • BTI

    -0.3600

    58.35

    -0.62%

  • AZN

    -1.2800

    183.46

    -0.7%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    36.36

    +0.03%

  • RIO

    -1.9500

    98.63

    -1.98%

  • GSK

    -0.7100

    50.9

    -1.39%

  • BCE

    -0.0300

    23.93

    -0.13%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.87

    -0.04%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.25

    -0.13%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    16.05

    -0.62%

  • BCC

    -3.8000

    74.33

    -5.11%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.93

    -0.39%

  • BP

    0.5300

    46.94

    +1.13%

UN resuming talks on high-seas treaty amid growing concerns
UN resuming talks on high-seas treaty amid growing concerns / Photo: Daniel SLIM - AFP/File

UN resuming talks on high-seas treaty amid growing concerns

After four inconclusive sessions, UN member states on Monday resume talks aimed at finally completing a treaty to protect the world's high seas, a vital yet fragile resource that covers nearly half the planet.

Text size:

A host of NGOs and affected countries say the pact is urgently needed to improve environmental stewardship over the vast, yet largely unregulated, area as it faces growing challenges.

But the Covid-19 pandemic slowed negotiations for two years, and a session in March that was supposed to have been conclusive made progress but ran out of time.

The new round of talks opening Monday is set to run through August 26 at United Nations headquarters in New York.

Whether it will really be the last round remains uncertain, according to those close to the talks.

Negotiators are "cautiously optimistic," said a source with the High Ambition Coalition, which groups some 50 countries led by the European Union.

The source told AFP that participants need to find a compromise between two "grand ideas": protecting the environment and regulating human activities on the one hand, while also guarding freedoms on the high seas.

The high seas begin at the border of nations' exclusive economic zones (EEZs), which by international law reach no more than 200 nautical miles (370 kilometers) from each country's coast, and are under no state's jurisdiction.

Even if the high seas represent more than 60 percent of the oceans -- and nearly half the planet -- they have long been largely ignored in favor of coastal zones, with protections extended only to a few vulnerable species. Only one percent of the high seas enjoys legal protection.

Yet, scientists have proved the importance of protecting oceanic ecosystems in their entirety. They produce half the oxygen humans breathe and help limit global warming by absorbing much of the carbon dioxide emitted by human activity.

They are seriously at risk, however, from the continuing rise in levels of carbon dioxide (which intensifies warming and makes ocean waters more acid), pollution and overfishing.

- A global 'compass' -

That adds to the urgency of finally completing the global pact on the "Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction," say NGOs and the High Ambition Coalition.

"This treaty is of major importance," said Julien Rochette, a researcher with the Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations (IDDRI), "because it is going to provide a framework -- a compass -- for the principles and rules guiding the entire international community in managing this common space."

But the latest treaty draft still fails to resolve several thorny issues or to choose among diverse and contending options, such as the conditions for creating so-called Marine Protected Areas.

To James Hanson of Greenpeace, the future Conference of Parties (or COP, a decision-making body which includes all signatory states) must have the power to "create these Marine Protected Areas without having to defer to the existing bodies."

Yet questions about cooperation with regional maritime organizations (such as over fishing rights) must yet be decided.

Also unresolved, Rochette told AFP, is whether the COP could ban certain activities on the high seas if a mandated environmental-impact study proves unfavorable, or whether a state could simply go ahead.

Another sensitive issue involves the allocation of potential profits from developing genetic resources in the high seas, where pharmaceutical, chemical and cosmetic companies hope to find miracle drugs, products or cures.

Such costly research at sea is largely the prerogative of the rich, but developing countries do not want to be left out of potential windfall profits drawn from marine resources that belong to no one. It remains unclear whether there has been substantial movement by key parties since the last round of talks, said Rochette.

He said those pressing hardest for agreement on this issue include the European Union, Australia, New Zealand and developing countries, while the strongest opposition comes from Russia and from countries concerned about fishing rights, including Iceland and Japan.

A.Ragab--DT