This past week my deputy Marie Damour traveled to Nelson for a workshop on ocean acidification which our Embassy co-sponsored with the New Zealand government, the NZ seafood industry and the Gordon & Betty Moore foundation. The workshop, titled āFuture Proofing New Zealandās Shellfish Aquaculture:Ā Monitoring and Adaptation to Ocean Acidification,ā was intended to respond to what Secretary of State John Kerry describes as the āeconomic, environmental, and policy concerns created by increasing levels of carbon dioxide and the resulting acidification of our oceans.ā
The two-day conference brought together more than 60 shellfish experts to share their knowledge in order to help identify ways to protect New Zealandās NZ$ 350 million (US$ 285 million) per year aquaculture industry from the effects of climate change. The agenda was organized around two topics identified as top priorities during the 2012 session of the N.Z.-U.S. Joint Commission on Science and Technology Cooperation āĀ (1) Climate Change Monitoring, Research, and Services in the Pacific, and (2) Marine and Ocean Research.
Just as climate change has evolved from a purely scientific discussion into a set of significant economic and security concerns, ocean acidification has quickly evolved from a theoretical exercise into a major economic threat. Just looking at the United States, for example,Ā one of every six jobs is marine-related, and more than one-third of the Gross National Product originates in coastal areas.