A multimillion dollar partnership between insurance group Convex Group Ltd and the Blue Marine Foundation will allow researchers to spend five years building an open-access database showing how much carbon the world’s seabeds can store.
It’s a relatively unstudied field compared with other forms of carbon sinks such as forests. The United Nations has backed the idea of a “blue economy” that connects economic growth to ocean protection, for example by incentivizing countries to do more to keep the waters clean.
“The ocean and its resources, while vital to all life on earth, are currently misunderstood and neglected,” said Professor Callum Roberts at the University of Exeter in England, the lead scientist on the Seascape Survey. The study will try to deduce “the amount of carbon stored in coastal seascapes and on the continental shelves, as well as how vulnerable these stores are to man-made damage,” he said.
The blue economy has already become a feature of sovereign debt markets after the Seychelles pioneered a blue bond in 2018. The UK’s Office of National Statistics posited in an April study that the country’s seabed could be more valuable as a carbon sink than as a source of oil and natural gas, though the estimates were limited due to the lack of data.
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