Need or Greed?
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English
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I’m Peter Neill, Director of the World Ocean Observatory.
Over the decade since the founding of the World Ocean Observatory, I have attended many conferences and international meetings on ocean policy and issues – on such topics as climate policy, marine education, oceanographic research, and the ocean and national security, among others. Sometimes I have attended as humble registrant, other times I have presented papers and power points, but never have I been invited to moderate a session, to shape a presentation and discussion on a specific topic, and so you can imagine my astonishment when the invitation came to organize a presentation at the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission semi-annual summit on ocean research to be held in Barcelona, Spain, in November 2014.
The Commission, known as the IOC, is part of UNESCO, the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, and typically gathers together nearly 1000 delegates from UN divisions, national governments, non-governmental organizations, universities and research institutes to address the state of the international ocean agenda, its goals and objectives, and progress, or the lack thereof, since the last meeting. The IOC is charged with coordinating all UN ocean activities through an inter-organizational working group call UN-Ocean, bringing together the cross-cutting interests and activities of the ten or more UN organizations with some kind of ocean brief. The conference, then, is a kind of public report of accomplishment, concern, and inter-action between ocean bureaucrats and administrators, scholars and research scientists, and academics and ocean advocates worldwide. For someone with my interest, it is a heady place to be.
So you can imagine my surprise, the World Ocean Observatory being something of an outlier among government institutions, ocean organizations, and civil society insiders, our purpose being communications beyond the defined limits of the more narrow missions of most attendees. But you cannot imagine my surprise at the title of the designated session, Biodiversity, conservation and the interface with human need and greed. Yes, you heard correctly, greed. Never have I heard such a radical term used in such events, there being a definite level of diplomatic nicety in every exchange between all parties, as if the politeness and deference accorded to those with whom you agree must also always be extended to those with whom you may violently disagree. If you have ever tuned into to the language of most any legislative body, you will have heard the florid address and convoluted argument in moderated argument and modulated tone that characterizes the most fervid debate.
The entire conference agenda will focus on biodiversity and conservation. There will be panels on climate policy and legislative initiative, high seas governance, fisheries regulation and enforcement, acidification and coral reef protection, marine protected area management, all contextualized by the assumption that the ocean matters, that its relevance to human need is understood, devoutly to be wished, exalted. Indeed, need, defined as something necessary and requisite, is the focus of the entire conference endeavor, to conserve, oversee, and sustain ocean resources as essential to the security, health, and continuity of civil society worldwide.
But greed, that is another matter altogether. Greed is excessive, inordinate, rapacious desire, at a level of aggression, acquisitiveness, and insatiability that is far beyond the necessary or requisite. Greed is psychological, even psychotic excess; greed is pollution; greed accounts for the underlying causality of unrestrained extraction of natural resources, illegal manipulation of financial instruments, political corruption, extra-legal competition, indifference to the rule of law, and often the excesses of war. How does one moderate a panel discussion of such an immoderate term?
To address greed is to inject politics into what is traditionally an apolitical discourse. And of course, politics lies at the heart of the matter. When so many committed professionals and advocates are brought together around such a demanding crisis as ocean sustainability, knowledge, imagination, and optimism are the motivating watchwords for their enthusiasm and commitment. The best ideas and best practices abound inside the conference hall; all is possible, until the realization comes that the politics outside will not permit such things at this time, that this nation or that will veto, that this president or that will not endorse, that this corporation or that will object, that this region or that will be unfairly treated. Again and again, the hopefulness of these meetings is neutralized and the progress envisioned reduced to best intentions and postponed plans for the future. I never fail to admire the resiliency of diplomats.
What am I do? Nothing, of course, always a useful option, just allowing the conventional practice to take its course and ignore the politics completely. Or let the politics speak, but to what avail, to what outcome that would somehow force the issue and in an outcome that finds traction, efficacy, and change? The question comes down to this: how do we transform research and policy into innovation and action?
We will discuss these issues, and more, in future editions of World Ocean Radio.
In November of this year Peter Neill, World Ocean Observatory director and host of World Ocean Radio, will attend the IOC Ocean Research Summit in Barcelona, Spain during which he will moderate a session entitled, “Biodiversity, conservation, and the interface with human need and greed.” In this episode of World Ocean Radio, he will describe the overall focus of the conference and will devote time to the word “greed” as it pertains to issues of ocean and climate. And he will address an often-asked question of ocean and climate conferences and summits: “How do we transform research and policy into innovation and action?”
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.
World Ocean Radio Has Gone Global: A selection of episodes is now available in Portuguese, Spanish, French, and Swahili. For more information, visit http://www.worldoceanobservatory.org/world-ocean-radio-global.
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