| Literature DB >> 34566277 |
Aysha Fleming1,2, Alistair J Hobday3,1, Jess Melbourne-Thomas3,1, Amelie Meyer4,5, Jan McDonald1,6, Phillipa C McCormack1,6, Rowan Trebilco3,1, Kelli Anderson4, Narissa Bax1,4, Stuart P Corney1,4, Leo X C Dutra1,7,8, Hannah E Fogarty1,4, Jeffrey McGee1,4,6, Kaisu Mustonen9, Tero Mustonen9, Kimberley A Norris10, Emily Ogier1,4, Andrew J Constable1, Gretta T Pecl1,4.
Abstract
Proactive and coordinated action to mitigate and adapt to climate change will be essential for achieving the healthy, resilient, safe, sustainably harvested and biodiverse ocean that the UN Decade of Ocean Science and sustainable development goals (SDGs) seek. Ocean-based mitigation actions could contribute 12% of the emissions reductions required by 2030 to keep warming to less than 1.5 ºC but, because substantial warming is already locked in, extensive adaptation action is also needed. Here, as part of the Future Seas project, we use a "foresighting/hindcasting" technique to describe two scenarios for 2030 in the context of climate change mitigation and adaptation for ocean systems. The "business-as-usual" future is expected if current trends continue, while an alternative future could be realised if society were to effectively use available data and knowledge to push as far as possible towards achieving the UN SDGs. We identify three drivers that differentiate between these alternative futures: (i) appetite for climate action, (ii) handling extreme events, and (iii) climate interventions. Actions that could navigate towards the optimistic, sustainable and technically achievable future include:(i)proactive creation and enhancement of economic incentives for mitigation and adaptation;(ii)supporting the proliferation of local initiatives to spur a global transformation;(iii)enhancing proactive coastal adaptation management;(iv)investing in research to support adaptation to emerging risks;(v)deploying marine-based renewable energy;(vi)deploying marine-based negative emissions technologies;(vii)developing and assessing solar radiation management approaches; and(viii)deploying appropriate solar radiation management approaches to help safeguard critical ecosystems. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11160-021-09678-4. © Crown 2021.Entities:
Keywords: Blue growth; Decade of the ocean; Global change; Transdisciplinary; UN sustainable development goals
Year: 2021 PMID: 34566277 PMCID: PMC8453030 DOI: 10.1007/s11160-021-09678-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Fish Biol Fish ISSN: 0960-3166 Impact factor: 6.845
Glossary of key terms
| Adaptation | We follow the IPCC’s definition of adaptation as “the process of adjustment to actual or expected climate and its effects. In human systems, adaptation seeks to moderate or avoid harm or exploit beneficial opportunities. In some natural systems, human intervention may facilitate adjustment to expected climate and its effects” (IPCC Adaptation includes both |
| Carbon dioxide removal | Activities that remove greenhouse gasses from the atmosphere, including through afforestation and reforestation (mangrove and sea grass restoration and kelp farming in the marine context), bioenergy with carbon capture and storage, iron fertilisation, direct air carbon capture and storage and advanced mineral weathering. |
| Extreme events | Biophysical occurrences that have been statically rare/unusual during recorded human history (i.e. over the past several thousand years) and that have significant ecological and socioeconomic impacts, outside normal variability. While rarity of occurrence is often part of the definition of extreme events, we use the term to encompass high-impact events that may occur with increasing frequency and intensity under climate change. |
| Mitigation | We follow the IPCC’s definition of mitigation: “a human intervention to reduce the sources or enhance the sinks of greenhouse gases” (IPCC |
| Solar radiation management | Activities that reduce the accumulation of heat in the atmosphere by increasing the proportion of solar radiation that is reflected rather than absorbed. Solar radiation management activities include the stratospheric injection of sulphate aerosols and marine cloud brightening. |
Fig. 1Climate change impacts ‘locked in’ for 2030 (IPCC 2014, 2019) and key ocean-based adaptation and mitigation actions (colour coding of icon outlines in bottom panel indicates whether actions primarily comprise of adaptation [gold] or mitigation [purple] activities, or may include both)
Fig. 2Mitigation (blue) and adaptation (gold) and interventions to address the impacts of climate change. Interventions with a technological focus (often collectively termed “geoengineering”) are shown in green
Indigenous and traditional views on ocean mitigation and adaptation
There was no part of the world’s Ocean where traditional and Indigenous peoples did not travel, visit or know about. Even Antarctic waters were visited by the Maori centuries before European exploration of the ocean (Mustonen et al. Today when climate change is altering the seas at large we can try to discern some aspects of climate change mitigation and adaptation questions from the viewpoint of Indigenous and local or traditional knowledge and wisdom. These knowledges have baselines and understandings of the ocean of which only a fraction has ever been seen outside of these worlds. The past 500 years of marine governance built on the dominion and greed by European settler powers has resulted in immense collapse of fish stocks, whale and marine mammal species, and other ecosystems across the planet (Díaz et al. Climate change affects marine areas in a range of system altering ways, including but not limited to warmer waters, loss of coral reefs and habitats, alterations to ocean currents, species on the move, unsafe travel at sea, unpredictable weather events, loss of resources both on the coasts and at sea, and a range of intertwined events and processes as a part of this regime shift. We can therefore ask critically what and how can Indigenous and traditional maritime peoples do in the context of mitigation and adaptation whilst having lost most of their previous global-wide access to the sea and her resources. A central answer is a return to Indigenous rights and title to the sea where possible, leaving sea and coastal areas to recover and reform in the new normal and support rewilding and restoration work where possible (Fischer et al If settler and global powers are serious in their commitment to help Indigenous and traditional communities to mitigate harm from global climate change and adapt to the new realities, they need to form a new relationship with the sea and her peoples (Frainer et al. Some actions can be taken. The first strategic action to take across the global coastal and marine environments is to operationalise an Indigenous-science guided pause in development and industrial use of marine resources, to allow ecosystems to rebuild, re-connect and re-organise themselves in this new normal. This can come in the form of ratifying The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), inclusion of Indigenous rights at the national EEZ level, and actively supporting Indigenous participation in international for a such as UN processes, including more inclusive participation in the production of IPCC reports. On a tactical level, some actions may be suggested. They should be always tailored to the local context and priorities in a co-governance manner in order to reach long-lasting solutions. For food security priorities, quotas should be given to the small-scale fleets and Indigenous harvesters (Farmery et al. |
Fig. 3Feedbacks among drivers for climate change mitigation and adaptation responses. *mitigation interventions are expected to reduce the frequency and intensity of extreme events in the long term, but even under our sustainable scenario, this effect will not be realised by the 2030 timeline
Fig. 4Business-as-usual vs. optimistic but technically achievable futures for ocean social-ecological systems
Fig. 5Actions and timescales for navigating toward a sustainable 2030