Hi all,

The Executive Secretary of IOC-UNESCO and others have weighed in on ocean 
fertilization, including the Haida experiment.  Nothing really new here, 
but gives a sense of their position.

Josh Horton

http://climate-l.iisd.org/guest-articles/climate-change-and-geoengineering-ocean-fertilization-practicalities-opportunities-and-threats/

Climate Change and Geoengineering: Ocean Fertilization Practicalities, 
Opportunities and Threats

*posted on: Monday, February 4th, 2013*

by: Wendy Watson-Wright, Executive Secretary, Intergovernmental 
Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO; Jorge Luis Valdes, Head, Ocean 
Sciences; and Henrik Enevoldsen, Program Specialist, Intergovernmental 
Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO

Concern over human-driven climate change and the lack of success in 
constraining greenhouse gas emissions have increased scientific and policy 
interest in geo-engineering - deliberate interventions in the Earth's 
climate system that might moderate global warming. One of the earliest 
proposed carbon-removal techniques is large-scale ocean fertilization.

This is accomplished by adding iron or other nutrients to surface waters. 
The intention is to enhance microscopic marine plant growth on a scale 
large enough to not only significantly increase the uptake of atmospheric 
carbon by the ocean, but also remove it from the atmosphere for long enough 
to provide global climatic benefit. This suggestion grew out of scientific 
ideas developed in the late 1980s, based on analyses of natural, long-term 
climate changes (i.e., ice age cycles) and experiments that provided new 
insights into the natural factors that limit ocean productivity, and 
thereby control the cycling of carbon between sea and sky.

*Major political and ethical challenges*

Unfortunately, the practicalities, opportunities and threats associated 
with ocean fertilization are only partly understood, and will in all 
likelihood include unintended ecological consequences, which in turn can 
pose important political, social and ethical challenges. Small-scale field 
experiments and associated modelling have shown that the likely maximum 
benefits of ocean fertilization as a negative emissions technique are 
modest in relation to anthropogenic climate forcing. It would also be 
highly challenging to quantify with acceptable accuracy the amount of 
carbon removed from circulation on a long-term basis, and in particular to 
adequately monitor unintended impacts over large space and time-scales.

Meeting the political, ethical and regulatory challenges of 
geo-engineering, including ocean fertilization, requires building toward an 
international governance framework to ensure that research of this nature 
is conducted responsibly and transparently. A global and effective 
regulatory mechanism is needed to be put in place for ocean fertilization, 
other than for small-scale scientific research studies within coastal 
waters.

The United Nations General Assembly has encouraged States to support 
further study and to enhance understanding of ocean fertilization 
(Resolution 62/215; December 2007). Four UN entities have major interests 
in this topic: the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO 
(IOC), the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the London Convention 
and Protocol (LC/LP) and the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). 
Together they cover the spectrum of marine science, marine conservation and 
pollution regulation.

*Ocean fertilization activities on hold*

In response to concerns that large-scale ocean fertilization might be 
attempted before its consequences were fully understood, and upholding the 
precautionary principle, the Parties to the CBD decided in 2008 that no 
further ocean fertilization activities for whatever purpose should be 
carried out in non-coastal waters until there is stronger scientific 
justification, assessed through a global regulatory mechanism. Such a 
regulatory framework is now being developed by the LC/LP.

The IOC has been closely involved in CBD and LC/LP discussions. Our 2009 
publication, "Ocean Fertilization: A Scientific Summary for Policy Makers", 
was commissioned in conjunction with the Surface Ocean - Lower Atmosphere 
Study (SOLAS), the International Commission on Atmospheric Chemistry and 
Global Pollution (ICACGP), the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP), the 
International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP) and the Scientific 
Committee on Oceanic Research (SCOR) of the International Council for 
Science (ICSU). It includes in its key messages that 'large-scale 
fertilization could have unintended (and difficult to predict) impacts, not 
only locally... but also far removed in space and time. Impact assessments 
need to include the possibility of such 'far-field' effects on biological 
productivity, sub-surface oxygen levels, biogas production and ocean 
acidification'.

Despite this, an uncontrolled geo-engineering project was carried out in 
July 2012, which caused considerable scientific and public criticism when 
communicated to the general public in October 2012. A private company 
dumped more than one hundred tons of iron, ten times the amount used in any 
previous experiments, to deliberately fertilize and trigger a plankton 
bloom in the Pacific Ocean 300 km off the west coast of Canada. The stated 
intention was to enhance fisheries in the area.

Given the present state of knowledge, we should all be deeply concerned 
about activities such as this that are carried out in the absence of 
transparency, in contradiction of the precautionary principle and in 
violation of international conventions. The ocean is a single, contiguous 
body of water that is crucial to human life: an unauthorized experiment 
carried out in one place can have consequences hundreds of kilometres away. 
Our well-being depends on a healthy ocean. We must all take responsibility 
for this global commons, and build on shared knowledge and international 
cooperation to manage it sustainably.

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