Press
Release No.2002-33
UN Oceans Atlas Provides
First Comprehensive
Real-Time Tool To Observe State Of World's Oceans
UN, Global Scientific
Partners Join Forces In Effort to Reverse Oceans Deterioration,
Promote Sustainable Development, Inform Policy Makers and Educate
Public
Washington/Rome/Paris - The UN
and leading international scientific agencies will launch on June
5 (World Environment Day) a pioneering Internet-based atlas providing
users with continuously updated strategic data on the state of
the world's oceans, maps, development trends and threats to human
health from the deteriorating marine environment.
More than two and a half years
in development after a decade of planning, the UN Oceans Atlas
represents the most ambitious global scientific information collaboration
ever online and an international consensus-building tool expected
to assist negotiations of future marine-related agreements.
Amid mounting concern over continuing
deterioration of marine and coastal ecosystems, several of the
world's foremost ocean agencies created this new tool with the
goal of helping reverse the decline and promote the sustainable
development of oceans. Over-fishing, destruction of coastal habitat
and pollution from industry, farms and households are endangering
not only fish - the leading single source of animal protein in
the human diet - but also marine biodiversity and even the global
climate. The Atlas will spotlight these and the other acute marine
issues with, in many cases such as ice cover, links to real-time
maps and tracking data.
"It is becoming increasingly
clear that to solve or prevent the world's biggest problems the
public and private sectors must come together to combine the best
they each have to offer. The Oceans Atlas does this by combining
the credibility and leadership of the United Nations with the
vast knowledge of scientific organizations to monitor, diagnose
and heal the great oceans of the world," said Timothy E.
Wirth, President of the United Nations Foundation.
Project manager Dr John Everett
said the Atlas is intended for a complete cross section of users
- from schoolchildren, educators and the general public to policy
makers, scientists, the media, NGOs, and resource managers needing
access to comprehensive databases.
The Atlas is designed to be an
encyclopaedic resource but also the world's foremost information
clearinghouse and online forum for experts in ocean issues.
"This is the first time a
community of world scientific and academic experts has collaborated
on an information product of this breadth and depth," said
Dr Jacques Diouf, Director General of the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO), which led the initiative with principal funding
of US $500,000 from the UN Foundation.
"The oceans play a crucial
role in sustaining life on earth," he added, "and this
important new tool will allow us to monitor and pay attention
to problems in a way that hasn't been possible in the past. It
will help coordinate and harmonize the work underway in various
parts of the UN and in national agencies, academic institutions
and other organizations and will serve a major role in moving
the world towards the sustainable use of oceans for food security
and human development."
The website will be supplemented
by a CD-ROM and other media, co-published with Cinegram Multimedia,
to reach broader audiences and regions where Internet access is
difficult. More than 900 topics are currently covered with 17
founding editors. Further issues and several hundred designated
topic editors will be added over time.
Admiral Conrad Lautenbacher, the
Administrator of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) calls the Atlas "both a challenge and an opportunity
for the ocean community" to integrate marine protection with
the broader goals of sustainable development such as clean water,
human health and reliable food supplies. By consolidating and
achieving a consensus around marine-related information from leading
agencies and experts worldwide, the UN Atlas will form an important
informational foundation for future national and international
policy development, setting research priorities and for intergovernmental
negotiations on ocean issues.
"National governments have
an important role to play," said Adm. Lautenbacher. "A
collective commitment from all countries - such as participation
in a global initiative like the UN Atlas of Oceans - will be needed
to preserve the oceans' benefits into the future." In addition
to a wealth of information, NOAA seconded Dr. John Everett as
Project Manager and provided support staff and funding.
Project Director Dr. Serge Garcia,
Director of the FAO Fisheries Resources Division, said the Atlas
"enhances the world's ability to form partnerships, to share
and pool information with all regions of the world, including
the least developed ones, greatly benefiting all nations concerned
about sustainable use of the oceans."
The need for the Atlas was identified
during the 1992 Rio Earth Summit in response to a call to identify
and address the greatest environmental challenges facing the planet.
The launch of the Atlas at a meeting of UNESCO's Intergovernmental
Oceanographic Commission (IOC) in Paris June 5 comes less than
12 weeks before the World Summit on Sustainable Development opens
in Johannesburg, South Africa.
"Ocean-related issues will
almost certainly dominate the international agenda later this
century if, as predicted, the Earth's continued warming accelerates
sea level rise and adds up to one metre to the height to our oceans,"
said Dr. Klaus Toepfer, Executive Director of the UN Environment
Programme.
Low-lying regions of the world
are frequently fertile, densely populated and invested with expensive
infrastructure. The human and material costs of a one metre sea-level
rise would be huge, affecting over 70 million people in coastal
China, 10 percent of the population of Egypt and 60 percent of
the people in Bangladesh. Among wealthier nations, over 60 percent
of The Netherlands' population could be affected and 15 percent
of the people and 50 percent of the industry of Japan would be
threatened. In the US, 17,000 square kilometres of wetlands, and
the same amount of dry land, could be lost - an area the size
of Connecticut and New Jersey combined. In low-lying countries
like the Maldives or the Marshall Islands, the entire population
is at risk.
The Atlas contains an initial 14
global maps and links to hundreds of others, including 264 maps
showing the distribution of fishery resources. A further 100 maps
showing global ice cover, navigation routes, earthquake and volcanic
activity, temperature gradients, bottom contours, salinity and
other ocean characteristics are being contributed by the Russian
Head Department of Navigation and Oceanography.
The National Geographic Society
will likewise make a major contribution to the Atlas, including
access to its map machine and marine-related information from
its extensive portfolio of books and magazines. The Census of
Marine Life, a global Washington-based organization working to
assess and explain the diversity, distribution, and abundance
of marine organisms, will also make its resources fully available
through the Atlas.
Said Dr Garcia: "The UN agencies
and their partners have provided structure and a great deal of
content based on their own expertise. We look forward to adding
much more knowledge from ocean users, scientists, managers and
institutions around the world, and to identifying the most qualified
international editors for individual topics."
Dr Patricio Bernal, Assistant Director-General
for the IOC of UNESCO and former Chairman of the UN Subcommittee
for Ocean and Coastal Areas said: "Natural ocean processes
have an impact on every aspect of life on land. Our mission in
IOC is to promote international cooperation to learn more about
the nature and resources of the ocean and coastal areas. Built
as a management tool to aid decision-makers, the Atlas is a successful
example of cooperation among UN Agencies and international centres
of excellence. Thanks to the Atlas project, the substantial amount
of information contained in the data-bases developed by the UN
will be now available to everybody."
Additional members of the project
partnership include: the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
International Maritime Organization (IMO), World Meteorological
Organization (WMO), the UN Convention on Biological Diversity,
and the UN Division for Ocean Affairs and the Law of the Sea.
* * * * *
Background
The UN Atlas of the Oceans organizes
information according to general subject areas:
· Uses - disposal of waste from land, energy, fisheries
and aquaculture, human coastal settlements, marine biotechnology,
non-consumptive uses, ocean dumping and ship wastes, offshore
oil, gas and mining, recreation and tourism, and transportation
and telecommunications.
· Issues - climate variability and climate change, economics,
emergencies, food security, governance, human health, pollution
and degradation, safety and sustainable development.
· Background - including biology and ecology, how oceans
were formed and how they are changing, monitoring and observing
systems, and maps, statistics and online databases
· Geographical - categorizes information according to geographic
region.
Among the issues addressed:
· Fishing: all 17 of the world's major fishing areas have
either reached or exceeded their natural limits and nine are in
serious decline, according to the FAO.
· Piracy: the number of reported piracy attacks worldwide
for 1999 rose nearly 40 percent compared with the previous year
and almost tripled compared with 1991 according to the International
Maritime Bureau of the International Chamber of Commerce.
· Algal blooms: The number of poisonous algal species identified
by scientists has nearly tripled since 1984, increasing fish kills,
beach closures, and economic losses. Large parts of the Gulf of
Mexico are now considered biological dead zones due to algal blooms.
· Coral reefs: 58
percent of the world's coral reefs are at high or medium risk
of degradation, with more than 80 percent of South-east Asia's
extensive reef systems under threat, according to the World Resources
Institute.
· Invasive species: Marine bio-invasions have been identified
as a major global environmental and economic problem with several
thousand species estimated to be in the ballast tanks of the world's
shipping at any one time. The Atlantic box jelly, believed to
have been released in a ship's ballast water, helped wipe out
life in the Black Sea. In San Francisco Bay, a new foreign species
takes hold every 14 weeks, scientists warn.
Contacts: Terry Collins, (+1-416) 878 8712; +1-416-538
8712
(UN Foundation, Washington): Sherry Pinkstaff (+1-202) 887 9040
ext. 511
(FAO, Rome): Nick Parsons (+39)-06-57 05 32 76
(UNESCO, Paris) Peter Coles, phone (+33)(0)1-45 68 45 41
Project Manager
Dr. John Everett and Dr. Serge Garcia, Director of the FAO Fisheries
Resources Division, are available for advance interviews from
Paris June 3-5. Please use the contacts above to schedule a time.
The UN Oceans Atlas is online at www.oceansatlas.org