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WHO GOVERNS THE SEA ?
WAYS TOWARD
FUTURE FORMS OF GOVERNANCE
Global Local
Yves Henocque, IFREMER/JAMSTEC/OPRF
Temple University Japan Campus, 4/04/2014
The oceans
Surface:
70 % of the earth
Volume:
90% of the earth
Ocean: the lifeblood of Earth
Driving weather
Regulating temperature
Supporting all kind of
living and mineral resources
Yet
95% of it remains unknown…
Indian ocean
Southern ocean
Pacific ocean
Atlantic
ocean
Arctic ocean
84,000 kms of seamless mountains
PROPOSED ABYSSAL PROVINCES (3500-6000m)
Toward a deep ocean observing strategy – Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS)
(From Watling L., et al., 2013)
deep ocean ecosystems
Down there:
it is cold: 2-4°C,
it is dark,
there is a very high pressure,
But it’s quite alive!
Environmental heterogeneity
Exceptional longevity, slow growth
With all kind of biological adaptation
And full of other resources
Oil and gas
Fertilizers
e.g. marine phosphates in Namibia (-400m)
Minerals
Polymetallic sulphides, polymetallic nodules,
cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts, rare earth mud
THE ARCTIC
The Economist Summit 2014:
« Hot to invest or cold feet »
The Arctic race is heating up !
INCREASING RED ZONES LEADING TO CUMULATIVE IMPACTS
Source: The Stockholm Resilience Centre www.stockholmresilience.org
• Land-based pollutions
• Overfishing
• Invasive species
• Seawater warming
• Seawater rising
• Oceans acidification
• Climate extreme events
• Ice melting
• Waste disposal
• Seabed mining ??
Cumulated
impacts
NON-LINEAR
UNSTABLE
WITH
THRESHOLDS
UNCERTAINTIES
SYSTEM DYNAMIC
« Creative
Destruction »
Plancton populations
Deep seabed communities
THE SYSTEM WE ARE LIVING IN: A SOCIAL-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEM
ECOSYSTEMS ACTORS
Drivers of
change
Environmental
processes
Ecosystem
services
Indirect drivers
 Demography
 Économy
 Social & political
 Cultural
 Scientific &
technological
Direct drivers
 Land use
 Introduction &
elimination of species
 Uses and technological
adaptation
 Use of resources
 Climate change
Dynamics
Physics
Chemical
Écological
Interactions
Between
individuals,
populations,
species and
compartments
Fluxes
energy, material,
nutrients,
informations
Provisioning
Regulating
Cultural
Supporting
Individual and social
well-being
Uses&
Users
KNOWLEDGE
communities
Civil society &
public G
O
V
E
R
N
A
N
C
E
Institutions
management practices
(policies, programmes, projects)
Knowledge Governance
ECOSYSTEM SERVICES ?
Provisioning: fish, energy, pharmaceutical,
minerals
Supporting: habitat, substrate, nurseries,
refugia, trophic support
Biodiversity: species, genes, enzymes, metabolites,
biomaterials, detoxification, anti-fouling
Regulating: temperature, CO2, nutrient cycling…
ACTORS AND GOVERNANCE
The type of governance set the frame within which management happens
MARKET
CIVIL
SOCIETY
Use of space and resources
and accountability
Private goods /Public goods / Commons (local/global)
STATE
Central and
Local governments
THE COMMONS ARE NOT PUBLIC GOODS
Common-pool resource:
Natural or human-made resource that everybody uses but nobody owns,
and where one person’s use effects another person’s ability to use the
resource (feudal land law and pre-colonization ‘commons’)
Tragedy vs. wealth of commons
What kind of institutions for collective action ?
Besides the law of market and the rule of State
What are the basic design principles of successful institutions for
managing common-pool resources: fishery, water resources, grazing
ground, internet, the air, scientific knowledge, ocean….
Elinor Ostrom (2009 Nobel Price)
GLOBAL COMMONS
Common heritage of mankind (CHM)
Humanity common concern
-Antarctic Treaty (1959)
-Moon Treaty (1979)
- Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982)
- Framework agreement on climate change (1992)
BACKGROUND: HISTORY of the LAW of the SEA
As free as the breeze…
1609: Dutch legal thinker, Hugo Grotius, wrote the ‘Mare liberum’
As the air, the sea should be free and open to use by all countries
‘Territorial sea’of about 3 nautical miles from land
All went well till mid-20th century…
Trade and fisheries expansion leading to extended national claims
1958: UN Conference on the Law of the Sea defined the continental shelf
1967: Malta’s Ambassador to the UN, Arvid Pardo, called for
« an effective international regime over the seabed beyond a clearly
defined national jurisdiction »
1971: Draft Ocean Space Treaty
Recognized the unity of the oceans as ecological systems
Compromising: better than nothing
1974: the beginning of a long negotiation
where CHM became limited to
the seabed and its resources
1982:
UN Convention on the Law of the Sea
(UNCLOS) is agreed
1994: UNCLOS is ratified
Still a very fragmented approach to jurisdiction
despite the irrefutable unity of oceans as ecological systems
Deep sea minerals: UNCLOS - ISA
Fishing: RFMO – FAO
Biodiversity and habitats (EBSAs): CBD
Shipping and pollution: IMO
Land-based pollution and debris: (UNEP)
Waste disposal: London Dumping Convention
Scientific research: Voluntary code of conduct
Cable & pipelines: unregulated
Bioprospecting: unregulated
.........
MPA
MPA
PA
Wetlands
MOREOVER…..
Universality far from being achieved,
UNCLOS: 166 countries (big absent: USA…)
UN Fish Stocks Agreement: 81 only…
Non compliance by ratifying countries themselves
Territorial waters boundary
Non respect of deep/fragile ecosystems (deep trawling)
Illegal Unreported Unregulated (IUU) fishing
To be adapted to new problems and issues
Conservation of high seas living resources (fisheries subsidies)
Bioprospecting (no existing rules in the high seas)
Climate change and ocean acidification
Drug smuggling, piracy, etc.
Since 2010: countries’ re-appropriation move
Requests of continental shelf extension (350 nm)
+ 24 million km² (EEZ+34%)
Why ?
0il and mineral resources: 87% within EEZs
Fishing resources: 90% within EEZs
above the continental shelf
INCREASED GLOBAL FISH
PRODUCTION
•
Source: FAO State of the World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2012
Catch per unit effort
Catches composition
Under-estimated
INCREASING RATE OF
DEPLETION
52% Fully exploited
20% Underexploited or
moderately exploited
19% Overexploited
8% Depleted
Source: FAO, State of the World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2012
* 1% recovering from depletion
INCREASING RATE OF DEPLETION
GLOBAL POPULATION GROWTH & FOOD
SECURITY
•In 2012 global population
is estimated at 7 billion
•In 2012, fish accounted
for between 30 percent to
50 percent of the animal
protein consumed
worldwide
•By 2025, global
population is expected to
grow to 8.5 billion
• Global seafood demand by
2025 would grow by a
further 37 percent to meet
the food security needs of
world
• Where would the fish
come from?
From Martin Tsamenyi, 2013
Global population growth and food security
REGIONAL FISHERIES
ORGANIZATIONS
REGIONAL FISHERIES ORGANISATIONS
DEAD END ?
OR
A COMPREHENSIVE REFORM
OF
THE LAW OF THE SEA ?
Which vision ?
Some first steps towards the vision
• How can we care about something we don’t know ?
Global monitoring system for the oceans
The UN ‘Regular process’ : too limited to a few experts
IPCC-like system is needed: international, consensus-oriented, multi-
stakeholder process for knowledge-based foundation for action and
guidelines for future stewardship of the oceans
• Short-term profit vs. long-term development
Valuing the ecosystem services to be incorporated
into decision-making processes
• Time for Oceans Sustainable Development Goals
• The strengthening of regional ocean governance
Regional Conventions, RFMOs, Biodiversity: Regional Sea Strategies
FISHERIES ?
Close the High Seas to Fishing !
To meet the UNCLOS equity, economic, and conservation objectives
provided that:
-gains (which would quickly superate losses) from a HS closure are
attributable to fish spillover into EEZs, thus although not fishing in
the HS, the freedom to fish resources from the HS is maintained
-a portion of the gains from closing HS could be used to support its
enforcement
Outcomes:
-Coordination mechanism across EEZs
-Reduction of the overall exploitation rates
-Protecting a sufficient range of the stock to allow rebuilding
We live in an interconnected system
FROM WATERSHEDS TO MARITIME AREAS
Watershed Coastal zone Seas and oceans
Integrated Water
Ressources Management
Integrated Coastal
Management
Regional Seas Management
Ocean Governance
Global governance
Regional seas
Inputs / Impacts / Coastal useLand-use / Water use
Maritime strategy
Ocean Policy
Mitigation / Regulation
Legal & Institutional framework / Stakeholders participation / Implementation / Monitoring
ICM Strategy
Maritime Spatial Planning
Ecosystem-based management
Nested governance approach
Local implementation
Satoyama – Community-based management – Satoumi - Co-management
Integrated coastal management
Where State sovereignty is the rule
National/Federal
Ocean policy
Regional/State
Coastal and Marine Strategies
Local/Inter-municipalities
Coastal management initiatives
National/Federal
Ocean policy
Regional/State
Coastal and Marine Strategies
Local/Inter-municipalities
Coastal management initiatives
COUNTRY X COUNTRY Y
Regional sea strategy
(Baltic, North-East Atlantic, Mediterranean, East Asian Seas….)
Common heritage of mankind’s design principles
EEZ/High seas boundaries are clearly defined
Rules governing uses are well matched to needs and conditions
All parties can participate in modifying the rules
A consensus-based monitoring system exists (state/practices)
A graduated system of sanctions is used
Parties have access to conflict resolution mechanisms
Appropriation, provision, monitoring, enforcement, conflict resolution,
and governance activities are organized in polycentric forms
System thinking -------- Nexus thinking
Thinking in terms of
relationships
connectedness
context
Taking the world as it is and seeking ways
to build on possibilities and dynamics already present
« Hartwell Paper » (2010) about UNFCCC
THANK
YOU!

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Pulbic Lecture Slide Presentation (4.4.2014) Who governs the sea? Ways toward future forms of governance

  • 1. WHO GOVERNS THE SEA ? WAYS TOWARD FUTURE FORMS OF GOVERNANCE Global Local Yves Henocque, IFREMER/JAMSTEC/OPRF Temple University Japan Campus, 4/04/2014
  • 2. The oceans Surface: 70 % of the earth Volume: 90% of the earth
  • 3. Ocean: the lifeblood of Earth Driving weather Regulating temperature Supporting all kind of living and mineral resources Yet 95% of it remains unknown…
  • 4. Indian ocean Southern ocean Pacific ocean Atlantic ocean Arctic ocean
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  • 6. 84,000 kms of seamless mountains
  • 7. PROPOSED ABYSSAL PROVINCES (3500-6000m) Toward a deep ocean observing strategy – Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS) (From Watling L., et al., 2013)
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  • 10. Down there: it is cold: 2-4°C, it is dark, there is a very high pressure, But it’s quite alive! Environmental heterogeneity Exceptional longevity, slow growth With all kind of biological adaptation
  • 11. And full of other resources Oil and gas Fertilizers e.g. marine phosphates in Namibia (-400m) Minerals Polymetallic sulphides, polymetallic nodules, cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts, rare earth mud
  • 12. THE ARCTIC The Economist Summit 2014: « Hot to invest or cold feet » The Arctic race is heating up !
  • 13. INCREASING RED ZONES LEADING TO CUMULATIVE IMPACTS Source: The Stockholm Resilience Centre www.stockholmresilience.org • Land-based pollutions • Overfishing • Invasive species • Seawater warming • Seawater rising • Oceans acidification • Climate extreme events • Ice melting • Waste disposal • Seabed mining ?? Cumulated impacts
  • 15. THE SYSTEM WE ARE LIVING IN: A SOCIAL-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEM ECOSYSTEMS ACTORS Drivers of change Environmental processes Ecosystem services Indirect drivers  Demography  Économy  Social & political  Cultural  Scientific & technological Direct drivers  Land use  Introduction & elimination of species  Uses and technological adaptation  Use of resources  Climate change Dynamics Physics Chemical Écological Interactions Between individuals, populations, species and compartments Fluxes energy, material, nutrients, informations Provisioning Regulating Cultural Supporting Individual and social well-being Uses& Users KNOWLEDGE communities Civil society & public G O V E R N A N C E Institutions management practices (policies, programmes, projects) Knowledge Governance
  • 16. ECOSYSTEM SERVICES ? Provisioning: fish, energy, pharmaceutical, minerals Supporting: habitat, substrate, nurseries, refugia, trophic support Biodiversity: species, genes, enzymes, metabolites, biomaterials, detoxification, anti-fouling Regulating: temperature, CO2, nutrient cycling…
  • 17. ACTORS AND GOVERNANCE The type of governance set the frame within which management happens MARKET CIVIL SOCIETY Use of space and resources and accountability Private goods /Public goods / Commons (local/global) STATE Central and Local governments
  • 18. THE COMMONS ARE NOT PUBLIC GOODS Common-pool resource: Natural or human-made resource that everybody uses but nobody owns, and where one person’s use effects another person’s ability to use the resource (feudal land law and pre-colonization ‘commons’) Tragedy vs. wealth of commons What kind of institutions for collective action ? Besides the law of market and the rule of State What are the basic design principles of successful institutions for managing common-pool resources: fishery, water resources, grazing ground, internet, the air, scientific knowledge, ocean…. Elinor Ostrom (2009 Nobel Price)
  • 19. GLOBAL COMMONS Common heritage of mankind (CHM) Humanity common concern -Antarctic Treaty (1959) -Moon Treaty (1979) - Convention on the Law of the Sea (1982) - Framework agreement on climate change (1992)
  • 20. BACKGROUND: HISTORY of the LAW of the SEA As free as the breeze… 1609: Dutch legal thinker, Hugo Grotius, wrote the ‘Mare liberum’ As the air, the sea should be free and open to use by all countries ‘Territorial sea’of about 3 nautical miles from land All went well till mid-20th century… Trade and fisheries expansion leading to extended national claims 1958: UN Conference on the Law of the Sea defined the continental shelf 1967: Malta’s Ambassador to the UN, Arvid Pardo, called for « an effective international regime over the seabed beyond a clearly defined national jurisdiction » 1971: Draft Ocean Space Treaty Recognized the unity of the oceans as ecological systems
  • 21. Compromising: better than nothing 1974: the beginning of a long negotiation where CHM became limited to the seabed and its resources 1982: UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) is agreed 1994: UNCLOS is ratified
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  • 23. Still a very fragmented approach to jurisdiction despite the irrefutable unity of oceans as ecological systems Deep sea minerals: UNCLOS - ISA Fishing: RFMO – FAO Biodiversity and habitats (EBSAs): CBD Shipping and pollution: IMO Land-based pollution and debris: (UNEP) Waste disposal: London Dumping Convention Scientific research: Voluntary code of conduct Cable & pipelines: unregulated Bioprospecting: unregulated .........
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  • 27. MOREOVER….. Universality far from being achieved, UNCLOS: 166 countries (big absent: USA…) UN Fish Stocks Agreement: 81 only… Non compliance by ratifying countries themselves Territorial waters boundary Non respect of deep/fragile ecosystems (deep trawling) Illegal Unreported Unregulated (IUU) fishing To be adapted to new problems and issues Conservation of high seas living resources (fisheries subsidies) Bioprospecting (no existing rules in the high seas) Climate change and ocean acidification Drug smuggling, piracy, etc.
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  • 29. Since 2010: countries’ re-appropriation move Requests of continental shelf extension (350 nm) + 24 million km² (EEZ+34%) Why ? 0il and mineral resources: 87% within EEZs Fishing resources: 90% within EEZs above the continental shelf
  • 30. INCREASED GLOBAL FISH PRODUCTION • Source: FAO State of the World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2012 Catch per unit effort Catches composition Under-estimated
  • 31. INCREASING RATE OF DEPLETION 52% Fully exploited 20% Underexploited or moderately exploited 19% Overexploited 8% Depleted Source: FAO, State of the World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2012 * 1% recovering from depletion INCREASING RATE OF DEPLETION
  • 32. GLOBAL POPULATION GROWTH & FOOD SECURITY •In 2012 global population is estimated at 7 billion •In 2012, fish accounted for between 30 percent to 50 percent of the animal protein consumed worldwide •By 2025, global population is expected to grow to 8.5 billion • Global seafood demand by 2025 would grow by a further 37 percent to meet the food security needs of world • Where would the fish come from? From Martin Tsamenyi, 2013 Global population growth and food security
  • 34. DEAD END ? OR A COMPREHENSIVE REFORM OF THE LAW OF THE SEA ? Which vision ?
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  • 37. Some first steps towards the vision • How can we care about something we don’t know ? Global monitoring system for the oceans The UN ‘Regular process’ : too limited to a few experts IPCC-like system is needed: international, consensus-oriented, multi- stakeholder process for knowledge-based foundation for action and guidelines for future stewardship of the oceans • Short-term profit vs. long-term development Valuing the ecosystem services to be incorporated into decision-making processes • Time for Oceans Sustainable Development Goals • The strengthening of regional ocean governance Regional Conventions, RFMOs, Biodiversity: Regional Sea Strategies
  • 38. FISHERIES ? Close the High Seas to Fishing ! To meet the UNCLOS equity, economic, and conservation objectives provided that: -gains (which would quickly superate losses) from a HS closure are attributable to fish spillover into EEZs, thus although not fishing in the HS, the freedom to fish resources from the HS is maintained -a portion of the gains from closing HS could be used to support its enforcement Outcomes: -Coordination mechanism across EEZs -Reduction of the overall exploitation rates -Protecting a sufficient range of the stock to allow rebuilding
  • 39. We live in an interconnected system FROM WATERSHEDS TO MARITIME AREAS Watershed Coastal zone Seas and oceans Integrated Water Ressources Management Integrated Coastal Management Regional Seas Management Ocean Governance Global governance Regional seas Inputs / Impacts / Coastal useLand-use / Water use Maritime strategy Ocean Policy Mitigation / Regulation Legal & Institutional framework / Stakeholders participation / Implementation / Monitoring ICM Strategy Maritime Spatial Planning Ecosystem-based management Nested governance approach Local implementation Satoyama – Community-based management – Satoumi - Co-management Integrated coastal management
  • 40. Where State sovereignty is the rule National/Federal Ocean policy Regional/State Coastal and Marine Strategies Local/Inter-municipalities Coastal management initiatives National/Federal Ocean policy Regional/State Coastal and Marine Strategies Local/Inter-municipalities Coastal management initiatives COUNTRY X COUNTRY Y Regional sea strategy (Baltic, North-East Atlantic, Mediterranean, East Asian Seas….)
  • 41. Common heritage of mankind’s design principles EEZ/High seas boundaries are clearly defined Rules governing uses are well matched to needs and conditions All parties can participate in modifying the rules A consensus-based monitoring system exists (state/practices) A graduated system of sanctions is used Parties have access to conflict resolution mechanisms Appropriation, provision, monitoring, enforcement, conflict resolution, and governance activities are organized in polycentric forms
  • 42. System thinking -------- Nexus thinking Thinking in terms of relationships connectedness context Taking the world as it is and seeking ways to build on possibilities and dynamics already present « Hartwell Paper » (2010) about UNFCCC