The acid truth about our oceans: experts urge action to limit
ocean acidification
29 November 2011
Today the International Ocean
Acidification Reference User Group (RUG) launches a new
publication, entitled "Ocean acidification: Acting on
Evidence", calling for a broader strategy to reduce ocean
acidification alongside other threats, such as overfishing and
pollution. A number of PML scientists were involved in the
development of this document and the associated press release can
be found below.
Ocean acidification can no longer remain on the periphery of the
international debates on climate change and the environment and
should be addressed by the United Nations (UN) Framework
Convention on Climate Change and other global environmental
conventions, urges International Union for Conservation of
Nature (IUCN) and the International Ocean Acidification Reference
User Group (RUG) at the climate change summit in Durban.
In the run up to the UN Conference on Sustainable Development,
which will take place in Rio de Janeiro in June next year (Rio+20),
world experts from RUG call for decision makers to urgently address
the critical issue of ocean acidification.
“The increasing amounts of carbon dioxide that we emit into the
atmosphere every day are changing our oceans, steadily increasing
their acidity, and dramatically affecting marine life,” says
Professor Dan Laffoley, Marine Vice Chair of IUCN’s World
Commission on Protected Areas and Chair of RUG. “This
may also have severe impacts on human life in the future. Only by
reducing our CO2 emissions and enhancing the protection
of oceans to strengthen their ability to recover, can we
effectively address this issue. Policy makers in Durban, and in Rio
in June next year, need to recognise this and take appropriate
actions.”
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions into the
atmosphere, particularly CO2, which is the main driver
of climate change and the main cause of ocean acidification, is one
of the goals of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. But
the latest RUG publication calls for a
broader strategy to reduce ocean acidification, alongside those
tackling other threats to the marine environment such as
overfishing and pollution.
According to the experts, although both
climate change and ocean acidification are caused by excessive
amounts of CO2 emissions, and so should be tackled
together, not all approaches used to address the former will be
effective in the fight against the latter.
"For example, ‘geoengineering'
solutions, such as reflecting solar radiation, which are
often suggested to deal with climate change, will not
address the progressive acidification of the ocean," says
Dr John Baxter of the Scottish Natural Heritage and Deputy
Chair of the RUG. "Both climate change and
acidification need to be taken into account when designing
solutions to these challenges."
Each year, the ocean absorbs approximately 25%
of all the CO2 we emit. Its acidity has increased by 30%
since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution and acidification
will continue at an unprecedented rate in the coming
decades. This can have a negative impact
on marine organisms, especially the 'calcifying’ ones
such as shellfish, molluscs, coral reefs and various types of
zooplankton and phytoplankton. Increasing ocean acidity requires
them to use more energy to build their shells, which has
potentially severe ecological consequences. If the current
acidification rate continues, it could lead to extinctions
of some species and impact others that feed on them.
“Through its ability to absorb large
amounts of CO2, the ocean plays a crucial role in
moderating the rate and severity of climate change”,
says Dr Carol Turley from the Plymouth Marine
Laboratory and the Knowledge Exchange Coordinator for the UK Ocean
Acidification Research Programme, one of the partners of the
Reference User Group. “But in many ways our ocean is
also a victim of its own success, as this capacity jeopardizes
its future health, its biodiversity and its ability
to continue to provide us with food and sustainable economic
development. Ocean acidification requires urgent and effective
action now, before it’s too late. The obvious action is to reduce
CO2 emissions to the atmosphere."