July 29, 2009 11:17 AM

How to Save an Increasingly Crowded Ocean

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  Vikki Spruilll is President and CEO of Ocean Conservancy, the nation's oldest and largest ocean conservation organization.

When we look out to the blue horizon, the ocean seems like a calm, vast space. But what we see on the surface of the water is deceiving. Under the water, the ocean is thriving with life and is bustling with industrial uses. Like urban sprawl on land, the demand for space in our oceans and on our coasts is growing. New renewable energy facilities, commercial fishing, recreation, offshore drilling and shipping are all competing for space, and our demands continue to grow. Our ocean is getting crowded at a time when it is vulnerable to major changes.

Climate change is damaging the ocean - temperatures are rising, and ocean acidification is taking place as the water absorbs the excess carbon dioxide we pump into the atmosphere. In addition to reducing our greenhouse gas emissions, we must protect ocean ecosystems the best we can in the face of our growing industrial demands, to help them remain resilient against the threat of climate change.

Protections are critical. A healthy ocean is essential to our health and the stability of our economy. The ocean is the engine that drives our climate. It provides much of the oxygen we breathe and food we eat. It is also important to our economy-more than $1 trillion, or one-tenth of the nation's annual gross domestic product, is generated from the coasts.

President Obama has made it clear that clean energy is the future for our country. He has also recognized the ocean plays an important role in meeting this challenge, and that we need a clear plan for using the ocean to fulfill this role. On June 12th, the President issued a Presidential Memorandum that calls for national ocean policy and creates an Interagency Ocean Policy Task Force. In the memorandum he recognized the need for a clear plan to conserve the ocean while reducing conflicts among ocean industries through the use of a tool called Marine Spatial Planning.

Marine Spatial Planning can bring order to the ocean and provide a framework for balancing ocean conservation and competing interests. Marine Spatial Planning is being used effectively by other countries - and by states like Massachusetts and Rhode Island - to do just that. It puts a process in place to manage the ecosystem as a whole and to evaluate cumulative impacts of the many uses of the ocean. It will help us to be better coordinated in the ways that we use our ocean.

Today, many separate decisions, plans and regulations govern ocean industries-in fact more than 20 federal agencies oversee various aspects of the ocean. Marine Spatial Planning allows us to maximize the economic and social benefits provided by the ocean, while protecting our most fragile marine ecosystems. Just as on land, the ocean is also a diverse ecosystem.

Certain habitats and wildlife, such as corals, can be lost forever and require special attention. Marine spatial planning provides the opportunity to evaluate where these special habitats are located, and ensure that vulnerable resources are conserved while industrial uses increase. When implemented properly, Marine Spatial Planning provides comprehensive, proactive planning, and long-term environmental conservation.

The ocean is a resource that can continue to produce what we need, but only if we preserve it. We are at a crossroads-now is the time to make real changes to protect the ocean. Our children and their children depend on us to make the right decisions today. President Obama has already taken important steps-we look forward to witnessing action in addition to words.

By Vikki Spruill

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by KJ4now July 18, 2009 12:31 PM EDT
Perhaps we will be introduced to a new Ocean Czar! LOL
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by truthseeker60 July 17, 2009 11:49 AM EDT
The Oceans should be the concern of ecologist more so than the trumped up global warming. There was a report a few months back of about a waste plastic jelly island the size of Texas in the middle of the Pacific. Its reported to be a two inch thick ooze of broken down remains of tons of discarded bags, bottles, six-pack holders, etc. Include this in with other discarded waste from mankind and we have the makings a very rude future. Remember the Calypso and it's lessons taught decades ago that have been conveniently forgotten by us "baby-boomers". Maybe we can blame it on the Taliban and start another War. Maybe its time to return to glass that can be recycled in future planned plants that would create Jobs while limiting our need for oil produced plastic, disposable items.
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