“Ocean protection will only succeed if we spend financial and brain power in developing sustainable solutions,” Qu said at the Our Ocean Conference in Oslo. Image: FAO/Suuronen Petri

Various investments in ocean sustainability will raise the amount of
fish to feed the poor, helping drive progress towards the eradication of
hunger which is the lynchpin for achieving the other Sustainable
Development Goals, FAO Director-General Qu Dongyu said in a speech.

“Ocean protection will only succeed if we spend financial and
brain power in developing sustainable solutions,” Qu said in a keynote
address at the Our Ocean Conference in Oslo.

Our Ocean 2019 is focusing on themes including climate change, marine
pollution and security, sustainable fisheries, as well as its
traditional focus on conservation initiatives. The conference, started
in 2014 by then-US Secretary of State John Kerry, aims to promote
voluntary government pledges to care for the ocean and has since
inception generated commitments totaling around US$ 18 billion and 12.4
million square kilometers of marine protected areas.

“Oceans provide us with enormous services,” Qu said, noting that
global per capita fish consumption has risen to 20.3 kilograms a year
and that fisheries and aquaculture provide livelihood opportunities to
more than 10 percent of the world's population. “If the ocean fails, it
is because we fail ourselves.”

The Director-General warned of a “dangerous sustainability divide” as
fisheries in developed regions become increasingly sustainable,
rebuilding stocks, while those in developing regions are not improving
as fast.

One-third of the world's fish stocks are overfished, and climate
change is likely to negatively impact stocks in tropical zones,
according to FAO.

Oceans should be addressed as a solution, not a problem, Qu said. He
urged a new push to invest in sustainable ocean growth and a significant
effort to boost aquaculture, particularly in Africa.

The Director-General spoke on a panel on fisheries governance along
with Bernard Esau, Minister of Fisheries and Marine Resources of
Namibia, and Harald Tom Nesvik, Minister of Fisheries and Seafood of
Norway, as well as other experts.

The Director-General proposed a commitment to achieve “100 percent” effective sustainability of our resources from the oceans and noted that FAO will this month host a major symposium in Rome to identify the technical solutions needed to achieve this vision. Next year's Our Ocean conference will be held in Palau.

Source: https://en.mercopress.com/2019/11/07/fao-director-general-calls-for-ocean-sustainable-solutions-for-fisheries