Countries around the globe must join together, raise ambition and
act faster to protect and restore nature on both land and sea,
Environment Secretary Thérèse Coffey has said on World Wildlife
Day (3 March).
Following the historic agreement reached at the UN Biodiversity
summit last year, the Environment Secretary is attending the Our
Ocean conference where she will work with other countries to make
this the decade we halt and reverse the loss of nature and
protect at least 30% of the global ocean by 2030. She will also
acknowledge the effectiveness of established tools such as CITES
convention that celebrates 50 years of protecting endangered
species today.
Building on commitments outlined in the Government’s Environmental Improvement
Plan launched last month and progress to protect nature on
land, the UK is this week announcing vital funding to boost
marine conservation efforts worldwide, fight climate change, and
support vulnerable coastal communities.
The UK has renewed support through its ambitious £500 million
Blue Planet Fund to
protect and restore important marine habitats such as mangroves,
coral reefs and seagrasses that play a key role in the fight
against climate change. This includes an additional £24 million
to the Global Fund for Coral
Reefs, and the UK becoming the first donor to the Blue Carbon Action
Partnership, committing £4 million to support countries
unlock and mobilise finance to protect and restore blue carbon
ecosystems.
The Environment Secretary has also announced £45 million to the
new ‘Blue Tech Superhighway’ project. From community-led
fisheries management enabling local communities to set and
monitor their own catches; new seawater farming systems working
with species more resilient to warmer waters; through to
pioneering approaches to reduce food waste, this investment will
support small-scale fishers and aquaculture farmers improve their
climate resilience, sustainability and incomes. The project will
also encourage collaboration between countries across Asia and
Africa to scale action.
This comes as the UK announced it will provide £1.5 million to
the Asian Development Bank’s new Blue Pacific Finance Hub to
support climate resilient, sustainable blue economies for Pacific
Small Island Developing States including developing circular
economies to reduce plastic waste and improved fisheries
management.
The Environment Secretary, Thérèse Coffey said:
It is almost impossible to overstate the importance of stepping
up our efforts to bolster the resilience of the marine
environment and, in turn, the economies and communities that
depend on it.
At the UN nature summit in Montreal, we made a commitment to
manage our whole ocean sustainably and set a target to protect at
least 30% of the world’s ocean by 2030. The UK is leading,
co-leading, and supporting global coalitions of ambition to drive
forward this mission, and I urge countries to come together to
deliver coordinated, impactful action on the ground.
She also urged more countries to join forces to tackle the
scourge of Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing, one
of the most serious threats to the world’s ocean which equates to
approximately 11-19% of reported global fisheries production and
leads to losses of roughly $10-23.5 billion in value. IUU fishing
undermines efforts to conserve fish stocks, damages marine
ecosystems, impacts global food supply chains and threatens
coastal communities whose livelihoods rely on sustainable
fishing.
The UK, US and Canada launched the world’s first global alliance
to tackle IUU fishing last year, with members sharing data and
tools to monitor and crack down on this pervasive issue. This
builds on progress under the UK-led Blue Belt Ocean Shield
programme which uses innovative surveillance techniques to tackle
illegal practices in over 4.3 million square kilometres of waters
around the UK Overseas Territories.
Since its launch, the Alliance has grown to 16 members, with
Norway, Iceland and Korea recently coming onboard. More members
will sign up at the Our Ocean conference today, including the EU,
Panama and New Zealand.
Thérèse Coffey said:
For too many communities, the threat of IUU fishing looms year
after year, as they bear the brunt of the instability and
violence that accompanies this serious, organised, transboundary
crime.
For marine species, the impact can be devastating and this has a
catastrophic effect on the lives of the hundreds of millions of
people who depend on fisheries for their livelihoods.
So, we need to accelerate our efforts and scale up. That is a
priority for us in the UK – something we are addressing by
improving import controls, sharing more data on vessels,
identifying those who profit from IUU fishing, and holding them
to account.