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Jas Chambers | Bureau of Meteorology, Australian Representative to UNESCO-IOCKaren Evans | CSIRO, Expert Planning Group for The Decade PlanningTony Worby | CSIRO, Chair, National Marine Science Committee
The Science We Need For The Ocean We Wanthttps://oceandecade.org/
• The UNESCO-IOC is leading Decade planning on behalf of the UN• The global ocean community is being engaged• The IOC, like other UN agencies, will align programmes and activities with
Decade objectives
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THE DECADE
Established in 1960 as a UNESCO body and is the competent organization for marine science in the UN system150 Member StatesThrough cooperation, assists countries to achieve 4 High Level Objectives:
• Ecosystem Health• Marine Hazards• Climate Change• Enhanced Scientific Knowledge
Australia is represented at UNESCO-IOC via the Bureau of MeteorologyAustralia hosts and co-sponsors two UNESCO-IOC offices in the Bureau's Perth offices
WHAT IS THE UNESCO-IOC?
The Decade will provide a framework for achieving a number of high level scientific outcomes, clustered around:
Science Action Plan developed by the EPG with input from a range of stakeholders (including you)
Six societal outcomes
Research and Development priorities proposed by stakeholders, including:• Comprehensive ocean observing system for all major basins• Quantitative understanding of ocean ecosystems• Data and information portal • Integrated multi-hazard warning system
THE DECADE
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Uptake and redistribution of CO2 and heat by the ocean
Plastics, deoxygenation, pharmaceuticals Ocean and cryosphere changes are
pervasive. Thresholds of abrupt change, long-term
changes that cannot be avoided, and irreversibility
Long response times imply long-term change.
THE CASE FOR THE DECADE
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THE OPPORTUNITY
Ocean in the UN Frameworks
CCRP PSMA
• Initiative of Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg
• Serving heads of government from 14 coastal nations: Australia, Canada, Chile, Fiji, Ghana, Indonesia, Jamaica, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, Namibia, Norway, Palau and Portugal
• Prime Minister Morrison is Australia’s member on the Panel.
• The Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment is the lead for Australia’s engagement in the Panel.
www.oceanpanel.org
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DECADES AND DECADES
2019–2028 Nelson Mandela Decade of Peace United Nations Decade of Family Farming
2018–2028 International Decade for Action "Water for Sustainable
Development“
2018-2027 Third United Nations Decade for the Eradication of
Poverty
2016–2025 United Nations Decade of Action on Nutrition Third Industrial Development Decade for Africa
2015–2024 International Decade for People of African Descent
2014–2024 United Nations Decade of Sustainable Energy for
All
2011–2020 Third International Decade for the Eradication of
Colonialism United Nations Decade on Biodiversity Decade of Action for Road Safety
2010–2020 United Nations Decade for Deserts and the Fight
against Desertification
https://www.un.org/en/sections/observances/international-decades/
Presenter name | Date
The United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (2021-2030):the ocean we need for the future we want.
Are our scientific efforts adequate enough?
NO
What is needed to accelerate our efforts in order to achieve Agenda 2030?
The UN Ocean Decade: develop scientific knowledge, build infrastructure and foster
partnerships for a sustainable and healthy ocean
A clean ocean, sources of pollution are identified, quantified and reduced and pollutants removed
A healthy and resilient ocean, marine ecosystems mapped and protected, multiple impacts are measured and reduced and ocean ecosystem services are maintained
A predicted ocean, society has the capacity to understand current and future ocean conditions, forecast their change and impact on society
A safe ocean, human communities are protected from ocean hazards and safety of operations at sea and on the coast in ensured
A sustainably harvested and productive ocean, ensuring the provision of food supply and alternative livelihoods
A transparent and accessible ocean, all of society has access to oceandata and information, technologies and have the capacities to inform theirdecisions
Interim Planning =>Group
Preparation Phase
ROADMAP
Implementation plan
Scientific communityNGOsCivil SocietyIndustryBusinessTraditional owners
Early career researcher network
Science action plan
Capacity development
Governance, monitoring &
reporting
Communication strategy
Implementation plan
Science community
Policy Makers
Private Sector
Foundations
UN partners
Creation of Ocean Decade Alliance
GLOBAL PLANNING MEETINGS
Science Community
Policy & Managers
STAKEHOLDER FORUM
Science Community
Policy & Managers
Business & Industry
Donors & Foundations
Civil society & NGOs
Science Community
Policy & Managers
Business & Industry
Donors & Foundations
REGIONAL WORKSHOPS
Civil society & NGOs
Ocean Decade endorsed meetings
Science action plan
Capacity development
Governance, monitoring &
reporting
Communication strategy
Implementation plan
Science action plan
Capacity development
Governance, monitoring &
reporting
Communication strategy
Implementation plan
Science action plan
Science Action Plan Framework: a value chain approachEach component adds value to each of the other components
observations of the whole ocean system
understanding of current and future ocean states
assessments of interactions between components of the ocean, including society
improving informed decision making and evaluation
a sustainable futureKn
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(DRAFT) Science Action Plan Framework
Objective 3…Objective 2Objective 1
Key action 1 Key action 1 Key action 1
Key action 2Key action 2 Key action 2
Guiding principles
Individual activities: global, regional, national, local
Guiding principles
Guiding principle 1: Actions of the Ocean Decade should be inclusive in their nature.
Guiding principle 2: Actions of the Ocean Decade should be based on partnerships between many disciplines and sectors.
Guiding principle 3: Actions of the Ocean Decade should be transformative in their nature.
Guiding principle 4: Actions of the Ocean Decade should aim to contribute to an equitable and sustainable future for all.
Strategic objectives
Objective 1: Increase transformative science capacity and capability globally
Objective 2: Expand, innovate and integrate global ocean knowledge systems
Objective 3: Understand and predict the whole ocean system and its component parts
Objective 4: Develop integrated assessment and decision support systems and other transformational tools and processes
Build and share scientific and technical capabilities to provide equitable access to ocean knowledge
Advance global ocean-based observation systems that deliver information on all aspects of the ocean
Map all components of the ocean including human activities and their spatio-temporal variation
Develop systematic and globally applicable cultural, economic, social and ecosystem indicators of ocean health that identify thresholds and tipping points
What next?
September: transmission of finalised Implementation Plan to UN General Assembly
June/July: review by IOC executive council
May: revised Implementation Plan to IOC MS
mid March: draft Implementation Plan released for commentcall for initial actions and associated portfolios/programmes/projects
January: start of Decade
May: Ocean Decade launch conference (Berlin)
2019
2020
June: Implementation Plan and first set of actions presented at UN Oceans conference
• Implementing the National Marine Science Plan
• Tony Worby - Chair NMSC (Jan 2019 – present)
NATIONAL MARINE SCIENCE
COMMITTEE
Marine science
Australia’s National Marine Science Committee
RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS
UNIVERSITIES
Why do we need a National Marine Science Plan?
1. Fund national research vessels for full use.
2. Sustain the Integrated Marine Observing System to support critical climate change and coastal systems research, and expand to include estuarine and coastal observations.
3. Develop marine science research training at our universities that is more quantitative, cross-disciplinary and congruent with industry and government needs. ✔✔
4. Establish and support a National Marine Environmental Baselines and Long-term MonitoringProgram, to develop a comprehensive assessment of our estate, and form the basis for management of Commonwealth and State Marine Reserve networks. ✔
5. Develop a coordinated decision-support science program for policymakers and marine industry. Slow progress
6. Create a National Ocean Modelling System to support ocean state predictions required by defence, industry and government. Slow progress
7. Facilitate coordinated studies on marine ecosystem processes and resilience to enable understanding of the impacts of development (urban, industrial and agricultural) and climate change on our marine estate. ✔
8. Create an explicit focus on the blue economy throughout the marine science system. ✔
Mid-life (2020) review of the Plan- infrastructure, skills, collaborations
✔✔✔
✔✔
What has changedsince 2015?
Major events since the NMS Plan was released in 2015. Each are associated with the Grand Challenges they influence and/or impact
Coral bleach
Major GABresearch
RV Nuyina
Plastics
Marine Heatwaves
MPAs
Mid-life (2020) review of the Plan
1. Emerging/ongoing challenges
Jurisdictional challenges“Borderless knowledge and decision making”
Digital revolutionData Decision support tools
Nature-based solutions to climate changePace of change and need for ‘intervention’
Biosecurity threats and vulnerability of ocean economy
Ocean narrativeBlue Economy underpinned by a healthy ocean
Decade of Ocean Science1. What do we want out of it?
2. What do we want to put in to it? (Currently no extra $$)
3. Oceans have a high profile in government, including PMO illegal fishing and plastic pollution
4. High level panel UN Oceans Conference (Lisbon, June)
5. UN SDGs Focus on delivery between now and 2030
6. NMSC Working Group will be focused on the Decade
One Planet, One OceanWhat can we achieve
together that we cannot
achieve separately?oceandecade.org