Another reason to lower CO2 emissions.
Harry
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CO2 levels may cause underwater catastrophe

Changes to the ocean caused by carbon dioxide emissions could lead to an
"underwater catastrophe", damaging wildlife, food production and
livelihoods, scientists are warning.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/environment/5420048/CO2-levels-may-cause-underwater-catastrophe.html


Published: 7:55AM BST 01 Jun 2009

The world's scientific academies - including the UK's Royal Society -
issued a warning that ocean acidification must be on the agenda when
countries attempt to forge a new global deal on cutting emissions in
Copenhagen in December.

And a separate paper warned that increasing acidity in the seas could
damage fish, corals and shellfish - leaving fishing communities facing
economic disaster.

The researchers from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution,
Massachusetts, said emissions from deforestation and burning of fossil
fuels had increased levels of CO2 in the atmosphere by almost 40 per
cent above pre-industrial levels.

Currently around 30 per cent of the CO2 put into the atmosphere by human
activities is absorbed by the oceans where it dissolves, altering the
chemistry of the surface sea levels making it more acidic.

The acidity can damage wildlife, particularly shell-forming creatures
and the species which feed on them, with knock-on effects on people who
rely on the oceans for food and livelihoods.

Damage to corals could also reduce the coastal protection from storms
that reefs currently provide.

According to the US researchers, there were almost 13,000 fishermen in
the UK in 2007, who harvested £645 million of marine products, almost
half (43 per cent) of which were shellfish.

In the US, domestic fisheries provided a primary sale value of 5.1
billion dollars (£3.2 billion) in 2007, they said.

The statement from the science academies of 70 countries, warned that
despite the seriousness of the problem, there was a danger it could be
left off the agenda at Copenhagen.

The joint statement calls on world leaders to explicitly recognise the
dangers posed to the oceans of rising CO2 levels, which it warns are
irreversible and could cause severe damage by 2050, or even earlier, if
emissions carry on as they are.

Martin Rees, president of the Royal Society, said the effect of rising
levels of CO2 in the atmosphere on the oceans had not received much
political attention.

But he said: "Unless global CO2 emissions can be cut by at least 50 per
cent by 2050 and more thereafter, we could confront an underwater
catastrophe, with irreversible changes in the makeup of our marine
biodiversity.

"The effects will be seen worldwide, threatening food security, reducing
coastal protection and damaging the local economies that may be least
able to tolerate it.

"Copenhagen must address this very real and serious threat."


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