National Academies Report Released: Review of the Federal Ocean Acidification Research and Monitoring Plan
Recently, the National Academies Press (NAP) released a report produced by the Committee on the Review of the National Ocean Acidification Research and
Monitoring Plan; Ocean Studies Board; Division on Earth and Life Sciences;
and the National Research Council titled, Review of the Federal Ocean Acidification Research and Monitoring Plan (2013). The 80-page pre-publication report available free with a one-time registration discusses how,
[t]he world's ocean has already experienced a 30% rise in acidity
since the industrial revolution, with acidity expected to rise 100 to 150% over
preindustrial levels by the end of this century. Potential consequences to
marine life and also to economic activities that depend on a healthy marine
ecosystem are difficult to assess and predict, but potentially devastating. To
address this knowledge gap, Congress passed the Federal Ocean Acidification
Research and Monitoring (FOARAM) Act in 2009, which, among other things,
required that an interagency working group create a "Strategic Plan for Federal
Research and Monitoring of Ocean Acidification."
Review of the Federal
Ocean Acidification Research and Monitoring Plan reviews the strategic plan
on the basis of how well it fulfills program elements laid out in the FOARAM Act
and follows the advice provided to the working group in the NRC's 2010 report,
Ocean Acidification: A National Strategy to
Meet the Challenges of a Changing Ocean. This report concludes that,
overall, the plan is strong and provides a comprehensive framework for improving
our understanding of ocean acidification. Potential improvements include a
better defined strategy for implementing program goals, stronger integration of
the seven broad scientific themes laid out in the FOARAM Act, and better
mechanisms for coordination among federal agencies and with other U.S. and
international efforts to address ocean acidification.
No comments:
Post a Comment