Ocean inspiration for a sustainable future: Rivers to Seas engagement and a UN Ocean Agency?
Adam Moolna

TL;DR
The paper argues for better public engagement in ocean sustainability, especially for inland communities, and proposes a UN Ocean Agency to drive global action.
Contribution
The paper introduces a Rivers to Seas engagement paradigm and advocates for a new UN Ocean Agency to address ocean sustainability.
Findings
Inland communities need stronger connections to ocean sustainability efforts.
Emotive messaging must align with complex delivery mechanisms for effective action.
A UN Ocean Agency is recommended to support post-2030 sustainability goals.
Abstract
Ocean sustainability matters to everyone because planetary health depends on the ocean and a healthy ocean requires a sustainability transformation across society, land and sea. The ocean is a critical arena for addressing the triple planetary crisis of climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution. Public engagement with ocean sustainability shows considerable potential to drive forward global sustainability action, as seen in contemporary concerns regarding marine plastic pollution rallying political leaders to develop a global plastics treaty. Despite this success, communities inland can still be much better connected to ocean sustainability and should be engaged to hold decision-makers to account for environmental and social progress alongside political interest in the growing ocean economy. Accessible and emotive messaging is required for public and political audiences, but…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicroplastics and Plastic Pollution · Coastal and Marine Management · Ocean Acidification Effects and Responses
