© 2020 Copyright 2020 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. This article explores the extent to which ocean acidification is adequately addressed by the law of the sea. It will assess the various obligations under Part XII of the 1982 United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea (LOSC) to prevent, reduce and control pollution of the marine environment, and analyse the extent to which these obligations appropriately address ocean acidification. This article argues that LOSC Parties are subject to a due diligence obligation under Part XII of the Convention to prevent, reduce and control ocean acidification, and that this obligation is not satisfied by simply complying with their obligations under the UN Framework Convention on ...
Nations’ impacts on the ocean and their impacts on climate change are linked, especially given the s...
KEY HEADLINES • Global-scale patterns and processes of ocean acidification are superimposed on other...
Author Posting. © Oceanography Society, 2009. This article is posted here by permission of Oceanogr...
Ocean acidification is often referred to as climate change’s “evil twin.” As the global ocean contin...
Ocean acidification is caused by increased absorption of carbon dioxide (CO2). Since the beginning o...
Much attention has been devoted to the problem of global climate change, but the effects of carbon d...
Carbon dioxide is an invisible pollutant that threatens water quality and entire marine ecosystems. ...
Ocean acidification—the rise in ocean acidity due primarily to the absorption of carbon dioxide (CO2...
Ocean acidification is defined as the change in ocean chemistry driven by the oceanic uptake of chem...
The ocean is becoming more acidic worldwide as a result of increasing atmospheric concentrations of ...
No multilateral environmental agreement (MEA) has so far been concluded with a view to addressing th...
Ocean acidification is caused by the atmospheric pollutant that is also the main driver of anthropog...
The projected increase in CO2 emissions absorbed by the oceans will cause changes in water chemistry...
This chapter explores how states party to Antarctic Treaty System instruments have addressed ocean a...
Ocean acidification has emerged over the last two decades as one of the largest threats to marine or...
Nations’ impacts on the ocean and their impacts on climate change are linked, especially given the s...
KEY HEADLINES • Global-scale patterns and processes of ocean acidification are superimposed on other...
Author Posting. © Oceanography Society, 2009. This article is posted here by permission of Oceanogr...
Ocean acidification is often referred to as climate change’s “evil twin.” As the global ocean contin...
Ocean acidification is caused by increased absorption of carbon dioxide (CO2). Since the beginning o...
Much attention has been devoted to the problem of global climate change, but the effects of carbon d...
Carbon dioxide is an invisible pollutant that threatens water quality and entire marine ecosystems. ...
Ocean acidification—the rise in ocean acidity due primarily to the absorption of carbon dioxide (CO2...
Ocean acidification is defined as the change in ocean chemistry driven by the oceanic uptake of chem...
The ocean is becoming more acidic worldwide as a result of increasing atmospheric concentrations of ...
No multilateral environmental agreement (MEA) has so far been concluded with a view to addressing th...
Ocean acidification is caused by the atmospheric pollutant that is also the main driver of anthropog...
The projected increase in CO2 emissions absorbed by the oceans will cause changes in water chemistry...
This chapter explores how states party to Antarctic Treaty System instruments have addressed ocean a...
Ocean acidification has emerged over the last two decades as one of the largest threats to marine or...
Nations’ impacts on the ocean and their impacts on climate change are linked, especially given the s...
KEY HEADLINES • Global-scale patterns and processes of ocean acidification are superimposed on other...
Author Posting. © Oceanography Society, 2009. This article is posted here by permission of Oceanogr...