东精影业

Skip to content
Reading time: 2 minutes
book cover
Cover of the Integrated Ocean Carbon Research report.

In absorbing carbon dioxide, the oceans play a crucial role in regulating the climate, a role yet to be fully understood. oceanographer Christopher Sabine co-authored a newly published strategy for comprehensive and coordinated ocean carbon research over the next decade.

The new report, , was published by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization’s Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC). It sets out to accomplish the vital task of indicating the current gaps and future directions for the integrated research of the ocean’s carbon cycle.

The ocean currently serves as the “blue lungs” of our planet. However, the ocean’s ability to contribute to climate regulation may decline and even be reversed in the future. The new report thus examines available observations and research to determine whether the oceans will continue to “help” humanity or whether they will turn against it, making mitigation and adaptation to warming more difficult.

International collaboration

In developing the report, the IOC gathered experts from the five international research and coordination programs on ocean-climate interaction.

Sabine, who is one of the lead U.S. editors of the report, said, “Integrating the ocean carbon research conducted through multiple international programs will enhance the U.S. investments in understanding climate change and possible solutions.”

“Bringing together the ocean carbon experts from different disciplines has created an exciting opportunity to address in a holistic fashion the critical questions of how the ocean affects and is affected by climate and our attempts to mitigate climate change,” stated Rik Wanninkhoff at NOAA, the other lead U.S. editor of the report.

This effort is an example of 东精影业 Mānoa’s goals of (PDF) and (PDF), two of four goals identified in the (PDF), updated in December 2020.

.

–By Marcie Grabowski

Back To Top