Current:Home > MyBiden Administration announces first-ever Ocean Justice Strategy. What's that? -Keystone Wealth Vision
Biden Administration announces first-ever Ocean Justice Strategy. What's that?
View
Date:2025-04-14 13:46:23
The White House will announce its first-ever Ocean Justice Strategy Friday at COP28 in Dubai, which it says will advance the nation's commitment to environmental justice for all.
The Biden Administration says indigenous communities have stewarded marine habitats for centuries. Now those communities are among those who may be most at risk for health and environmental harm from those habitats.
The strategy, which the administration describes as a "vision for ocean justice," was developed with input from public comments and from consultation with Tribal nations and roundtables with U.S. Territories and Native Hawaiian organizations.
The new strategy includes a variety of marginalized groups, including Black, Latino and Native communities.
“The ocean is a life source for us all, but because of historic injustices and underinvestment, some communities are hit harder by devastating climate change impacts,” said Brenda Mallory, the chair of the White House Council for Environmental Quality. “The Biden-Harris Administration’s new Ocean Justice Strategy will help to address historic inequities, improve the well-being of people in communities connected to the ocean, and safeguard a healthy ocean for everyone.”
The Biden Administration’s Ocean Climate Action Plan, released in March 2023, called for the creation of the new strategy.
What is the Ocean Justice Strategy?
The Ocean Justice Strategy describes the vision, goals and high-level objectives for coordinating and guiding ocean justice activities across the Federal government, according to the Federal Register. It builds on current administration activities and commitments aimed at advancing environmental justice.
It will also serve as a reference for Tribal, Territorial, State, and local governments, regional management bodies, and non-governmental groups.
The new strategy is a broad outline of the administration's priorities and the administration plans to follow up with more specifics in the months ahead.
'This strategy clearly sets out our values'
According to the new initiative, "ocean communities with a significant proportion of people who are Black, Latino, Indigenous and Native American, Asian American, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander may be disproportionately affected by ocean-related health and environmental harms and hazards, as may be communities with a significant proportion of people who experience persistent poverty or other forms of social inequality."
“President Biden has made it a priority to address the climate crisis for all Americans,” said Arati Prabhakar, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology. “This strategy clearly sets out our values as the climate changes. When we conduct research, collect data and make decisions about the ocean, we must engage with communities whose lives are intertwined with the ocean and the Great Lakes.”
Conservation group applauds the new strategy
"It is often the most vulnerable communities that suffer the greatest impacts from climate change," said Beth Lowell, Oceana's vice president for the United States. "We celebrate the Biden administration’s commitment to ensure that these voices are heard in future government decisions."
Offshore drilling, fisheries management and reducing plastic pollution are just a few of the areas where these voices are needed, Lowell said.
'Ocean justice policy will protect the ocean for all'
Ocean conservation will be more successful and have better outcomes if Indigenous peoples and communities of color are included, said Marce Gutierrez-Graudins, founder and executive director of Azul, a nonprofit focused on Latinos at the intersection of ocean conservation and environmental justice.
“For too long the ocean conservation movement has been pretty exclusionary,” Gutierrez-Graudins said.
“It is important that we have policies that include and serve everybody because conservation measures do not work unless they have majority buy in,” she said. “I’m excited to see that the federal government is walking along on this.”
She founded Azul in 2011 after being the only Spanish speaker among 60 people appointed to a group to help create marine protected areas in Southern California, with no access to materials or outreach for other Latinos.
“We have had disproportionate burdens placed on Indigenous communities and communities of color, due to ocean pollution, lack of access and industrial development,” Gutierrez-Graudins said. “Having an ocean justice policy will protect the ocean for all.”
More:Climate advocates say the oceans are overlooked in climate change. Biden's new action plan would change that.
veryGood! (59)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Trump assails judge in 2020 election case after she warned him not to make inflammatory remarks
- Woman goes missing after a car crash, dog finds her two days later in a Michigan cornfield
- Aidan O’Connell impresses for Raiders, while questions linger for 49ers backup quarterbacks
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- How — and when — is best to donate to those affected by the Maui wildfires?
- 'I wish we could play one more time': Michigan camp for grieving kids brings sobs, healing
- Call it 'stealth mental health' — some care for elders helps more without the label
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Morgan Freeman on rescuing a Black WWII tank battalion from obscurity
Ranking
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Broncos coach Sean Payton is making his players jealous with exclusive Jordan shoes
- Russian fighter jet crashes at Michigan air show; video shows pilot, backseater eject
- A woman says she fractured her ankle when she slipped on a piece of prosciutto; now she’s suing
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Ex-Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria: Derek Jeter 'destroyed' stadium by removing HR sculpture
- Just how hot was July? Hotter than anything on record
- Shoji Tabuchi, National Fiddler Hall of Famer and 'King of Branson,' dies at 79
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
John Legend and Chrissy Teigen's Baby Girl Esti Says Dada in Adorable Video
Is Social Security running out? When funds run dry solution may be hard to swallow.
The 1975 faces $2.7M demand by music festival organizer after same-sex kiss controversy
Intellectuals vs. The Internet
‘Old Enough’ is the ‘Big Bisexual Book’ of the summer. Here’s why bi representation matters.
Michael Oher, former NFL tackle known for ‘The Blind Side,’ sues to end Tuohys’ conservatorship
Police apologize after Black teen handcuffed in an unfortunate case of 'wrong place, wrong time'