posted on 2024-11-17, 13:30authored byPeter I Macreadie, Alistar I Robertson, Bernadette Spinks, Matthew P Adams, Jennifer M Atchison, Justine Bell-James, Brett A Bryan, Long Chu, Karen Filbee-Dexter, Lauren Drake, Carlos M Duarte, Daniel A Friess, Felipe Gonzalez, R Quentin Grafton, Kate J Helmstedt, Melanie Kaebernick, Jeffrey Kelleway, Gary A Kendrick, Hilary Kennedy, Catherine E Lovelock, J Patrick Megonigal, Damien T Maher, Emily Pidgeon, Abbie A Rogers, Rob Sturgiss, Stacey M Trevathan-Tackett, Melissa Wartman, Kerrie A Wilson, Kerrylee Rogers
The global carbon sequestration and avoided emissions potentially achieved via blue carbon is high (∼3% of annual global greenhouse gas emissions); however, it is limited by multidisciplinary and interacting uncertainties spanning the social, governance, financial, and technological dimensions. We compiled a transdisciplinary team of experts to elucidate these challenges and identify a way forward. Key actions to enhance blue carbon as a natural climate solution include improving policy and legal arrangements to ensure equitable sharing of benefits; improving stewardship by incorporating indigenous knowledge and values; clarifying property rights; improving financial approaches and accounting tools to incorporate co-benefits; developing technological solutions for measuring blue carbon sequestration at low cost; and resolving knowledge gaps regarding blue carbon cycles. Implementing these actions and operationalizing blue carbon will achieve measurable changes to atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations, provide multiple co-benefits, and address national obligations associated with international agreements.