Ocean Acidification - the facts
What do we do? - Outreach

 

A special introductory guide for policy advisers and decision makers

There is a clear consensus from the many scientific statements that are now being made about ocean acidification, that rapid, unprecedented changes are occurring.

The guide is available in 5 languages, click on the link to download:

Hi resLow res

Hi res ❘ Low res

Hi res ❘ Low res

Hi res ❘ Low res

Hi res ❘ Low res

Copenhagen, December 2009, is when the world was waiting to see how we will meet the greatest challenge of our generation - climate change. Copenhagen is where we also released a ground-breaking new guide to ocean acidification - how the ocean is becoming progressively more acidic due to the carbon dioxide we emit.

With an overall message to dramatically cut our emissions of carbon dioxide the guide places the ocean centre stage. It shows in simple and clear words how our ocean is being driven towards unnaturally more acidic conditions and why this matters. It explains what this means now and in the future for all of us, and what is being done about it. For the first time an easy to understand guide on this most critical of issues are simultaneously available in English, French, Spanish, Arabic and Chinese, with global distribution. Pick up your copy using the links above.

The guide is the first product prepared by the Ocean Acidification Reference User Group, an initiative of the European Project on Ocean Acidification (EPOCA), whose role is to work with leading scientists to rapidly communicate key messages to policy advisers, decision makers and, beyond that, a mass public audience. Production of the guide was sponsored by Natural England and EPOCA by leading scientists and organizations worldwide who freely gave their time and expertise to create this landmark product.

 

EPOCA ocean acidification blog

The EPOCA blog provides daily updates on scientific articles and media coverage on ocean acidification.

Subscribe in a reader


about 1 day ago Some corals like it hot http://t.co/S9iaOZaW
about 1 day ago Temperatures -not acid- could cook coral to death http://t.co/Nqvnraua
about 1 day ago Rising sea temperatures boost coral growth http://t.co/BMuJk2G7
about 1 day ago Ocean warming drives coral growth rates in Western Australia http://t.co/sQLqsoId
about 1 day ago Element/Calcium ratios in middle Eocene samples of Oridorsalis umbonatus from Ocean Drilling Program Site 1209 http://t.co/EJPS27qO

 This web site is hosted by Observatoire Océanologique de Villefranche sur Mer