Copenhagen Blog

Posts Tagged ‘oceans’

Don’t Forget the Acid

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009
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Ocean acidification makes it difficult for marine life - such as corals - to build their calcium carbonate shells. At increased levels of acidity, these shells will actually begin to dissolve. Photo: Jiangang Luo/Marine Photobank

Copenhagen, Denmark. Wow! What a whirlwind couple of days here in Copenhagen. COS participated in the COP-15 “Oceans Day” events and I spoke to the assembled group about ocean acidification as part of a panel of international scientists and policy experts. One issue at hand is “what should the target limit be?”. For the atmosphere, people talk about 450 ppm greenhouse gas equivalents as a target maximum. The term “equivalents” is a nod to the fact that other gases have much greater specific greenhouse effects that carbon dioxide. Methane is a good example of this. So in fact, if we add up the effects of the other gases, we are now at an equivalent CO2 level in the atmosphere of about 420 ppm. So, 450 ppm isn’t very far away – less than 10 years in fact. Can we stay below 450 ppm? Doesn’t seem likely. Should we strive to do so? Absolutely.

But does this work for the ocean? Not at all. We have good reason to believe that the oceans and life in the sea will suffer serious and negative consequences if carbon dioxide levels are maintained above 350 ppm. In fact, modern marine life has evolved and adapted to natural levels of average CO2 in the ocean’s surface waters that range from 180 ppm to 280 ppm, so even 350 ppm represents an adaption challenge. The challenge comes from ocean acidification –the changing pH and carbonate saturation state of the sea as a result of the uptake of excess CO2 from the atmosphere. So even though there is much focus here at COP-15 on specifying a maximum permissible rise in temperature (some say 2 degrees; others, like small island states, argue for 1.5 degrees C), a better metric to use for the future of the ocean and all people that depend on it is the actual concentration of carbon dioxide. 350 ppm actual CO2 is a good clear target and we are already way beyond it. Nevertheless we should aspire to bring the ocean back down to 350 ppm as soon as possible. And this is just for CO2. The concept of greenhouse gas equivalents doesn’t easily apply here, at least insofar as ocean acidification is concerned. We need to sort out a way of getting this target inserted into the negotiation process.

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Dunbar and Adina Abeles (COS Planning Director) inspect the "Copenhagen Ice Bear"

We ran into Holmes Hummel today, a former Stanford ES and IPER student, now a lead negotiator for the US Department of Energy. She pointed out that unless we have a way to scrub CO2 out of the atmosphere, it will be a long time before we can get back to 350 ppm. Models support her view. It could take over 100 years for oceanic CO2 levels to drop back to 350 ppm, even if we do embark on dramatic emissions reductions today. This means that mitigation against most ocean acidification effects is an intergenerational issue, a point made eloquently by Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg in our conversation with Holmes. Can we get people behind the notion that they must act now in order to save the oceans 50 years or 100 years out? It seems like we should be able too but it’s a tough sell in fact, and again, the community here is mostly focused on temperature rise targets on land. The ocean must play a more prominent role in future climate change meetings.

- posted by Dr. Rob Dunbar, Professor of Earth Sciences at Stanford University

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Rob Dunbar finds an agreeable sign at a Copenhagen train station

Climate Change and the Ocean – In Pictures

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

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Copenhagen, Denmark. As part of Oceans Day at COP15, the Center for Oceans Solutions teamed up with the International League of Conservation Photographers (iLCP) to produce a six minute multimedia short entitled Oceans +2C.  Oceans +2C uses the backdrop of stunning ocean photography to deliver a series of messages on the ocean in the face of climate change.  The messages come from a collection of leading ocean scientists from Stanford University, MBARI and the Carnegie Institute for Science and are given in their own words.   The film was launched at the Oceans Day reception, co-sponsored by the Center for Ocean Solutions and hosted by the Global Forum on Oceans, Coasts and Islands as part of their day long program dedicated to integrating the ocean into climate change policy.  View Oceans +2C here:

As a partnership dedicated, in large part, to elevating the role of science in policy, the Center for Ocean Solutions came to COP15 to communicate the central role that the ocean plays in the earth’s climate, as well as the urgent need to consider it in climate-based decision-making.  Our team of scientists, policy experts, students and communicators have been actively engaging the COP processes to highlight cutting-edge ocean-climate science and encouraging our world leaders to adopt this science into their policy framework.  Amongst the tools used for this outreach, the Center published a fact sheet entitled The Oceans in a +2C Warmer World.  The fact sheet was distributed via a week-long exhibit, at the European Environment Agency on Oceans Day and within press kits at various briefings held for journalists.

- posted by Arlo Hemphill Arlo Hemphill

Oceans Rise as Kyoto is Sidelined

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Green Turtle in South Florida.  Photo Courtesy Kim Mohlenhoff.

Green Turtle (Chelonia mydas) in the U.S. Virgin Islands. Photo courtesy Kim Mohlenhoff.

Copenhagen, Denmark. December 14 was Oceans Day at COP15!  It was also the day negotiations broke down (again) over the whole issue of whether parties will agree to parallel commitments under Kyoto and new commitments binding all countries participating in COP15 (recall that US is not a party to Kyoto).  So, several delegates from developing countries and small island states took solace in the relative calm of the all-day and in-to-the-evening science-to-policy-to-film and discussion oceans event at the European Environment Agency building in downtown Copenhagen.

One after another, delegates from the Solomon Islands, Monaco, Indonesia, South Africa, and Cape Verde reflected that the scientific presentations at Oceans Day were the best they’d ever seen.  The Center for Ocean Solutions was represented by professors Rob Dunbar and Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, who gave two stunningly clear presentations on ocean acidification and climate change impacts on tropical marine systems and human communities.  That’s the good news.  The bad news is that the science isn’t getting through to the negotiating parties.  In the words of Representative Gordon Darcy Lilo, Minister of Environment, Conservation and Meteorology of the Solomon Islands, “the science has not been persuasive so far — that is why negotiations have not gone well in Copenhagen.”

After such a great day of very sobering, albeit excellent, science presentations, this is a hard pill to swallow.

The message is clear:  we have to do a better job of communicating and integrating science into policy decision making, which is exactly what the IPCC was and is designed to do.  So, why are we at this point now and what can we do about it?  The developing countries want and need their own scientific voice.  Not imported scientists, but their own.  Dr. Kwame Koranteng of the Fisheries Management and Conservation Service of the FAO/UN adamantly says developing countries need help with scientific capacity-building.  We should be exchanging our graduate students and post docs and supporting science education in developing countries.

- posted by Meg Caldwell, Executive Director, Center for Ocean Solutionsmeg