
164: Mega-Cities by the Sea
From: World Ocean Radio
Series: World Ocean Radio: The Sea Connects All Things
Length: 06:18
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How do we protect the ocean? Perhaps the most popular tactic in play today is the marine protected area, a growing number of places around the globe designated and structured to shelter pristine ocean space. But if we are to look for a primary strategy for ocean protection, we must look beyond these distant places and focus closer to home to the mega-cities that are the true point source of the most dangerous and deadly contributors to the ongoing pollution of the world ocean.
In this episode of World Ocean Radio, host Peter Neill will discuss these places of development, industry, and manufacturing and will argue that we must move beyond the protected areas of our world ocean and look to our cities as visionary laboratories for change, with an eye toward turning coastal mega-cities into exemplary marine protected areas.
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Peter Neill, Director of the W2O and host of World Ocean Radio, provides coverage of a broad spectrum of ocean issues from science and education to advocacy and exemplary projects. World Ocean Radio, a project of the World Ocean Observatory, is a weekly series of five-minute audio essays available for syndicated use at no cost by community radio stations worldwide.
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Piece Description
How do we protect the ocean? Perhaps the most popular tactic in play today is the marine protected area, a growing number of places around the globe designated and structured to shelter pristine ocean space. But if we are to look for a primary strategy for ocean protection, we must look beyond these distant places and focus closer to home to the mega-cities that are the true point source of the most dangerous and deadly contributors to the ongoing pollution of the world ocean.
In this episode of World Ocean Radio, host Peter Neill will discuss these places of development, industry, and manufacturing and will argue that we must move beyond the protected areas of our world ocean and look to our cities as visionary laboratories for change, with an eye toward turning coastal mega-cities into exemplary marine protected areas.
______________________________________________________________________
Peter Neill, Director of the W2O and host of World Ocean Radio, provides coverage of a broad spectrum of ocean issues from science and education to advocacy and exemplary projects. World Ocean Radio, a project of the World Ocean Observatory, is a weekly series of five-minute audio essays available for syndicated use at no cost by community radio stations worldwide.
Broadcast History
WERU 89.9 FM, Blue Hill, ME; California Academy of Sciences/Steinhart Aquarium; KSER-FM, Everett, WA; Erie Maritime Museum, Mystic Seaport, Maine Boats Homes & Harbors; 3CR Melbourne: Out of the Blue.
Transcript
I’m Peter Neill, Director of the World Ocean Observatory.
When we are threatened, our natural instinct is to protect ourselves. That truism applies to our bodies, our homes and families, indeed to all the things we hold essential and sacred. So, too, with the ocean, this vast nurturing global resource that, as we argue weekly here on World Ocean Radio, is being affected and altered in real and critical ways that threaten our lives in an ever-expanding catalogue of negative impacts and consequences.
How, then, do we protect the ocean? First, we look to the most obvious threats – the circumstances and conditions that offer the best evidence of the challenges we face. We debate about climate change, CO2 emissions, acidification, fisheries collapse, extreme weather, sea level rise – all of which are evident in continuing research, real-time and real world conditions, and personal experien...
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Additional Credits
Peter Neill, Host; Trisha Badger, Associate Producer
