Governing novel climate interventions in rapidly changing oceans
Réglementer les nouvelles interventions climatiques dans des océans en mutation rapide
Morrison, Tiffany H. ; Pecl, Gretta ; Nash, Kirsty L. ; Hughes, Terry ; Cohen, Philippa J. ; Layton, Cayne ; Brown, Katrina ; Lovelock, Catherine E. ; Lemos, Maria Carmen ; Adger, W. Neil ; Lawless, Sarah ; Muir, Bob ; Gurney, Georgina G. ; Mcleod, Elizabeth ; Mills, Katherine E. ; Fairweather-Morrison, Imani ; Phillips, Michael ; Sullivan, Andrew ; Hilmi, Nathalie ; Holmes-McHugh, Lucy ; Pradhan, Sisir ; Streit, Robert ; Niles, Navam ; Ogier, Emily
Marine systems are rapidly changing in response to global heating. The scale and intensity of change are triggering a host of novel interventions to sustain oceans and ocean-dependent societies. However, the pace of new interventions is outstripping capacity to prevent unintended consequences because governance systems to ensure responsible transformation of marine systems are not yet in place. Responsible transformation entails transitioning marine systems to sustainable, equitable, and adaptive states through weighing intervention risks against benefits, resolving ethical liabilities, improving social cobenefits, establishing legitimacy, and managing climate policy integrity. Global, national, and local actors must urgently convert responsible transformation principles into rules?and practice?to ensure that novel marine-climate interventions are safe, equitable, and effective.</p>
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