Sweeters writes: "As climate change makes this already fragile ecosystem even more vulnerable, Greenpeace is campaigning to establish an Arctic Sanctuary to protect the area. Why an Arctic Sanctuary? Here's my list of reasons to protect the North Pole."
We need an arctic sanctuary. (photo: Rose Sjolander/70)
24 December 14
hy an Arctic Sanctuary? Here’s my list of reasons to protect the North Pole.
#1: It’s a really special place. You don’t need to tell me twice that the Arctic is an incredible place. But now it’s been officially recognized as such by the global scientific community and those who make laws to protect the world’s oceans. Earlier this year, the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity recognized the central Arctic Ocean as an Ecologically or Biologically Significant Area (EBSA), a distinction that recognizes its regional and global importance as an ecosystem.
Indeed, the wildlife is awe-inspiring: million of breeding migratory birds and incredible species including whales, walrus, seals, narwhals, foxes, caribou, and polar bears. In the summer, this “Land of the Midnight Sun” is among the most biologically productive places in the world. It is also home to a rich cultural diversity among its more than four million residents, including over 20 Indigenous groups. Let’s not mess up such a special place with oil drilling or industrial-scale fishing.
#2: Climate change puts major stress on the Arctic. While climate change is affecting all parts of the planet, the Arctic is particularly susceptible. The region is warming at twice the rate of the rest of the planet and scientists are observing the sea ice decrease significantly. This affects wildlife that rely on ice coverage for hunting, resting, and raising their young. Consequently, Arctic communities, especially those that rely on healthy wildlife populations for subsistence hunting in the lower regions, are affected.
Scientists are also observing things like an increase in disease-causing parasites in the region, which could affect both people and wildlife. While creating an Arctic Sanctuary would not directly address the sources of greenhouse gases, it’s a critical means of limiting pressure on the region and strengthening ecosystems to help them to adapt and be resilient.
#3: Do it for the fish. The world’s oceans are struggling. 80% of global fish stocks are fully- or over-exploited, meaning they need serious management and protection. What does that have to do with the Arctic? While we don’t know everything yet about how the retreating ice will affect fish populations, scientists and policy makers anticipate that as the ice melts, the commercial fishing industry will move in, accessing ice-free areas that it previously couldn’t.
In 2009, the US government placed a fishing ban on US Arctic waters in order to give time for adequate study of the region before deciding whether to allow large scale fishing there. A sanctuary in the central Arctic Ocean would act on the same precautionary principle and protect fish populations from seeing the same fate of so many others around the world.
#4: We have an opportunity now. Early next year, US Secretary of State John Kerry will be in a unique position to lead the way towards an Arctic sanctuary, as the US becomes the chair nation of the Arctic Council, a global body of stakeholders and nations that border the Arctic. The Council will drive the global conversation about the Arctic. If the Council countries agree to a sanctuary, it will be a huge step toward a binding agreement to protect the region. Tell Secretary of State John Kerry to make Arctic conservation a priority.
#5: Where would Santa go? Enough said.