Carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere and absorbed by water lowers its pH level, making the ocean more acidic and less able to sustain life. In 2009 a group of scientists included this ocean acidification (OA) as one of nine planetary boundaries that must remain within safe bounds if the earth is to remain stable and resilient. That study recognised that ocean health is integral to the overall health of the planet. A more recent study concluded that by 2020 the planetary boundary for OA had already been crossed. It is the seventh of the boundaries to have been breached.
For over two decades, governments and international organisations have recognised the danger that OA poses to marine life, and by extension to economies and societies. Supported by a large volume of scientific research detailing the threat, measures to combat OA have been incorporated into numerous national policies and international agreements, including the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). But the crossing of the planetary boundary is a clear indicator that those efforts have failed.
Policy fragmentation, at both international and national levels, is a major reason for the lack of progress on OA. Seen in conflicting objectives, duplication and weak accountability for results, such fragmentation is, an issue across ocean management as a whole. Many experts believe that a more holistic, systems-based approach to ocean management can integrate OA action more effectively alongside parallel efforts to address other stressors of ocean and planetary health. In this article, they discuss why such an approach has potential to eventually turn the tide.
Continue reading ‘The ocean as system’





