An Emerging Ocean
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English
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Welcome to World Ocean Radio...
I’m Peter Neill, Director of the World Ocean Observatory.
We think we know the world. We look at maps, at globes, at projections that inform us of the continents spread across a stasis of blue.
The ocean in this worldview is taken for granted. It is characterized by scale into seas, bays, and coastal arrangements; it is connected to land only by the incursions of rivers, the interruptions of lakes, like watery roots that feed the needs of human settlements that mostly line the edge. We focus on ourselves and apply to this familiar chart the latitude and longitude of our aspirations, our successes and our failures.
What might it take to upset this way of looking at the world?
Consider an entirely different perspective. Look at the interrelation of land and sea not from the side but from the top, that is, abandon the equator as an orienting line, shift to the high latitudes, and observe the circumpolar views of the Arctic and Antarctica.
Let’s look at the north to see what we can see. First, we observe an entirely different arrangement of land and nations. The ocean becomes suddenly diminished, covered with ice and encircled by a very different diagram of arbitrary political boundaries. The United States presence is reduced from a vast tri-coastal continental expanse to the marginal extent of Alaska. The Scandinavian presence is similarly modest – Norway, Sweden, and Finland with minor connection, Iceland as a small island state, and Denmark aligned through its territorial possession, Greenland, itself with a perimeter many times that of these other nations. Canada has a long and convoluted connection, and the Russian Federation out-distances and dominates them all with a coastline that occupies almost half the total circumference of our view.
This visualization challenges our conventional understanding, and graphically reveals and rearranges the priorities of access and influence. At meetings of the Arctic Council, the primary body for Arctic policy, the contiguous nations have an obvious place at the table, while others, like Japan and China and Brazil, lay claim to involvement if only in search of research opportunities, extraction of rich mineral, oil and gas resources, and a presumably rich fishery to exploit as such industry everywhere else on earth has been critically diminished. Ironically, the balance of power is redefined in different parameters. Who matters now almost comes down to something as finite as who has the most icebreakers to allow passage.
But that ice is melting, at record levels, and is revealing an emerging ocean, more vulnerable to every use known to our consuming society, an all-you-can-take opportunity that excites profiteers and profits and ups the economic anticipation for all parties. Here come the giant cruise ships, the ice-certified tankers, the industrial factory vessels, the floating rigs, and the deep-sea extractors, all leveraged by government subsidies and predatory lenders, manically justified by calculations and returns that are not necessarily correct or achievable.
We are poised to bring our conventional thinking and presumptuous enterprise to impact on this emerging ocean. But what is the logic? If these activities have already proven bankrupt and destructive, why would we perpetuate them to corrupt a new place? In the Antarctic, we have chosen a different strategy – by defining that area as a commons for knowledge and research, exploiting its inaccessibility to conserve its unique ecology. But the Arctic is a different situation as result of accelerated climate change and the undeniable presence and needs of the many thousands of people live there, today mostly in poverty and social distress.
Why does the Arctic have to be developed as we have done in the past? Why can’t we try another way -- that enables value through common practice to assure sustainability of limited resources, and to share that value through cooperative structure and behavior, and to demonstrate a possibility for utility and equitable governance that can in execution be the most valuable outcome of all – a new way to engage the land and the ocean for the benefit of all mankind, a new strategy to construct not destruct, to conserve not exhaust. Let’s not waste the challenge of an emerging ocean. We will have no second chance.
We will discuss these issues, and more, in future editions of World Ocean Radio.
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Arctic ice is melting at record levels, revealing an ocean open and vulnerable to enterprise and extraction. In this episode of World Ocean Radio, host Peter Neill suggests that the Arctic be treated like the Antarctic-—a place for research and conservation rather than one of exploitation and exhaustion.
About World Ocean Radio
Peter Neill, Director of the World Ocean Observatory and host of World Ocean Radio, provides coverage of a broad spectrum of ocean issues from science and education to advocacy and exemplary projects. World Ocean Radio, a project of the World Ocean Observatory, is a weekly series of five-minute audio essays available for syndicated use at no cost by college and community radio stations worldwide. A selection of episodes is now available in Portuguese, Spanish, French, Swahili, and Mandarin, enabling us to reach 75% of the world's population. For more information, visit WorldOceanObservatory.org/world-ocean-radio-global.
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Ice breaks away from a frozen coastline near the Norwegian Arctic town of Longyearbyen April 23, 2007.
Credit
REUTERS/Francois Lenoir
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