Global Civil Society & the UN Sustainable Development Goals

Goal 14: Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources

Life Below Water


Goal 14 is about conserving and sustainably using the oceans, seas and marine resources. Healthy oceans and seas are essential to human existence and life on Earth.

The Ocean is intrinsic to our life on earth. Covering three-quarters of the Earth’s surface, contain 97 percent of the Earth’s water, and represent 99 percent of the living space on the planet by volume.

They provide key natural resources including food, medicines, biofuels and other products; help with the breakdown and removal of waste and pollution; and their coastal ecosystems act as buffers to reduce damage from storms. They also act as the planet’s greatest carbon sink.

Worryingly, marine pollution is reaching extreme levels, with over 17 million metric tons clogging the ocean in 2021, a figure set to double or triple by 2040. Plastic is the most harmful type of ocean pollution.

Currently, the ocean’s average pH is 8.1 which is about 30 per cent more acidic than in pre- industrial times. Ocean acidification threatens the survival of marine life, disrupts the food web, and undermines vital services provided by the ocean and our own food security.

Careful management of this essential global resource is a key feature of a sustainable future. This includes increasing funding for ocean science, intensifying conservation efforts, and urgently turning the tide on climate change to safeguard the planet’s largest ecosystem. Current efforts to protect are not yet meeting the urgent need to safeguard this vast, yet fragile, resource.

Name Acronym Founded City HQ Country/Territory HQ Type I Type II

Memorandum of Understanding on the Conservation of Southern South American Migratory Grassland Bird Species and Their Habitats

2007 Bonn Germany T g

Memory of the World Programme

Memoria Mundi 1993 Paris France K g

Mer et monde

Montréal QC Canada G

Meso-American-Caribbean Sea Hydrographic Commission

MACHC 1994 Monte Carlo Monaco K g

Michael Succow Foundation for the Protection of Nature

Succow Foundation 1999 Greifswald Germany G f

Middle-East Nature Conservation Promotion Association

G

Mighty Earth

Washington DC USA G

Milieukontakt International

1987 Amsterdam Netherlands G

Mind and Life Europe

MLE 2008 Winterthur Switzerland F

Ministerial Conference on Fisheries Cooperation Among African States Bordering the Atlantic Ocean

ATLAFCO 1989 Rabat Morocco F g

More and Better

Rome Italy F y

Most Beautiful Bays in the World Club

1997 E

Mundo Maya Organization

1992 Tegucigalpa Honduras G

Mundus maris

2010 Brussels Belgium F

MusaNet

Montpellier France F

Museums Association of the Caribbean

MAC 1989 D

Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization to the Convention on Biological Diversity

Nagoya Protocol 2010 T g

Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center

NERSC 1986 Bergen Norway G

Nansen International Environmental and Remote Sensing Centre

NIERSC 1992 St Petersburg Russia E

National Council for Eurasian and East European Research

1978 Seattle WA USA G

Native Oyster Restoration Alliance

NORA 2017 Narragansett RI USA J

NATRUE

2007 Brussels Belgium D

Natura 2000 Network

1992 Brussels Belgium K g

Natural Capital Coalition

NCC 2012 London UK C y

NatureNet Europe

2004 Tilburg Netherlands F

NatureServe

1994 Arlington VA USA G

Natuur and Milieu

Utrecht Netherlands G

Netherlands Institute for the Law of the Sea

NILOS 1984 Utrecht Netherlands N j

Network for Business Sustainability

NBS 2005 London ON Canada F

Network for Environmental Projects in Technology United in Europe

NEPTUNE 1993 Leeuwarden Netherlands N

Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific

NACA 1990 Bangkok Thailand F g

Network of Aquaculture Centres in Central-Eastern Europe

NACEE 2003 Szarvas Hungary E

Network of Asian River Basin Organizations

NARBO 2004 Saitama Japan E y

Network of European CNS Transplantation and Restoration

NECTAR 1990 Galway Ireland F

Network of Institutes for Socioeconomic Studies of the Caribbean Basin

1981 Coral Gables FL USA G j

Network of International Science and Technology Centers

1994 Islamabad Pakistan F y

Network of Latin American Women of the Fishery Sector

2000 Montevideo Uruguay F

Network of Marine Protected Area Managers in the Mediterranean

MEDPAN 1990 Marseille France F

Network of Reference Laboratories for Monitoring of Emerging Environmental Pollutants

NORMAN Network 2005 Verneuil-en-Halatte France F y

New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade - New Zealand Aid Programme

2002 Wellington New Zealand G g

NEXUS

2011 Los Angeles CA USA J

NGO Forum on Environment

FOE 2010 Geneva Switzerland E y

NGO-UNESCO Liaison Committee

Paris France E y

Nickel Institute

1984 Brussels Belgium F j

Niger Basin Authority

NBA 1964 Niamey Niger D g

Nile Basin Capacity Building Network for River Engineering

NBCBN-RE 2002 Cairo Egypt F

Nile Basin Discourse

NBD 2003 Entebbe Uganda F

Nile Basin Initiative

NBI 1999 Entebbe Uganda F g

nitidae

2017 Lyon France J

Niue Treaty on Cooperation in Fisheries Surveillance and Law Enforcement in the South Pacific Region

T g

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