FPCD aligns with the UN Secretary General on World Oceans Day
THE FPCD aligns itself with the message of the United Nations Secretary General on the occasion of World Oceans Day 2012. Please read below full text of message:
THE
SECRETARY-GENERAL
--
MESSAGE ON
WORLD OCEANS DAY
8 June 2012
This year’s World Oceans Day falls
as the international community marks an important milestone: the thirtieth
anniversary of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
When the Convention opened for
signature on 10 December 1982, it was rightly characterized as a “constitution
for the oceans.” Forged through a
process of negotiation among more than 150 States, the treaty is a living
monument to international cooperation.
When it was adopted, the Convention on the Law of the Sea made treaty
history. With 320 articles and 9 Annexes covering every aspect of the oceans
and marine environment, the Convention sets out a delicate balance of rights
and duties.
The protection of the world’s oceans
and coasts is among the key goals of the United Nations Conference on
Sustainable Development, which will open in Rio de Janeiro in just 12 days. The Convention is contributing to this goal through
its provisions, including on the preservation of the marine environment, marine
scientific research and the transfer of marine technology.
We must do more for our world’s oceans, which are threatened by pollution,
depleted fishery resources, the impacts of climate change and the deterioration
of the marine environment. Rio+20 must
mobilize the United Nations, governments and other partners to improve the
management and conservation of oceans through initiatives to curb overfishing, improve
protection of the marine environment and reduce ocean pollution and the impact
of climate change.
There could be no more fitting way to commemorate World Oceans Day than
for all countries that have not yet done so to ratify the Convention on the Law
of the Sea.
Let us make 2012 another milestone year for the world’s oceans, so that
we can set sail toward the future we want.
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