Tony Haymet meets film director James Cameron at an event hosted by News Corporation in Davos. Image: News Corporation
Scripps
Director Provides Key Scientific Perspective at
Davos World Economic Forum
Fisheries, ocean acidification, and the Great Pacific
Garbage Patch among issues presented by Tony Haymet at global gathering
Scripps Institution of Oceanography/ University of California, San Diego
With the world’s fragile economies beginning to recover
from the global economic crisis, all eyes were fixed on the Swiss city of Davos
in late January for the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum.
The five-day meeting gathered more than 2,500 of the
world’s experts in banking and finance, as well as global political leaders and
a select number of scientists and educators.
Among them was Tony Haymet, director of Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, who provided scientific insights
in areas where Scripps’ cutting-edge research contributes knowledge to topics
around the planet.
“The World Economic Forum at Davos is a focal point for
the greatest minds in business and government, and I was pleased to have been
invited to share information about Scripps’ scientific contributions that are
imperative for understanding many global issues,” said Haymet. “I’m also very
grateful to a great donor family friend of Scripps, who wishes to remain
anonymous, for funding my participation at the meeting.”
Formal sessions in which Haymet discussed recent Scripps
research:
The state of the world’s fisheries.
Based on the work of Scripps scientists Tony Koslow, David Checkley, George
Sugihara, and NOAA’s Southwest Fisheries Science Center researchers, Haymet
offered important perspectives about Scripps research on the health of the
world’s fisheries, which supply a significant percentage of the planet’s human food
supply. He also relayed information about overfishing and fish species that
have been overexploited and a few others that are rebounding. In addition to
Haymet, the panel at this session included Abdoulaye Wade, the president of
Senegal; Brian Baird, U.S. Congressman from the State of Washington’s 3rd
District; Pascal Lamy, director-general of the World Trade Organization; Lucy
Neville-Rolfe, executive director, corporate and legal affairs, of the UK
supermarket chain Tesco; and Philippe Sands, a Queen’s Counsel and
distinguished professor of law from University College London.
Ocean acidification. As society loads carbon
dioxide into the atmosphere, the oceans are taking up a certain portion of it.
Building on the research of Scripps scientists Andrew Dickson, Victoria Fabry,
Uwe Send, Jennifer Smith, Stuart Sandin, and others, Haymet described how the
extra carbon absorbed by oceans at their surface converts to an acid form. The
change in chemistry robs organisms such as corals and sea creatures that form
shells of calcium carbonate, one of the main ingredients they need to develop.
This could inhibit the proper growth of marine invertebrates and disrupt the
ecosystems in which they reside.
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch. During a key
multimedia “studio” session at the World Economic Forum, Haymet described and
illustrated Scripps students’ recent voyage to the North Pacific Ocean Gyre, a
location where plastic and other human-produced debris is accumulating. The
findings from the expedition, led by student Miriam Goldstein, will help inform
communities and world leaders about the scope and impacts of the problem, as
well as policy responses.
Global viruses.
In addition to their role in global pandemics, viruses also play fundamental
parts in the functioning of the ocean environment. Haymet described research by
Scripps marine microbiologist Farooq Azam and others that has revealed how
marine microbes—at the micrometer scale—help structure the ocean’s ecosystems
and response to global change.
Geoengineering.
Haymet discussed prospects for a variety of mitigation strategies that involve
manipulating the environment. Numerous Scripps scientists and Haymet have
warned about the unknown consequences of such ideas, which range from seeding
the oceans with iron to inducing greater carbon dioxide uptake to sequestering
carbon in seafloor chambers.
Equally
valuable were informal meetings with members of
Congress, international leaders, and conservationists, especially on the
fallout from the recent climate meetings in Copenhagen. Haymet also renewed Scripps’ friendship
with director James Cameron, a member of the Scripps Advisory Council, who
packed the local Davos theatre near midnight for advertised 3-D clips of his
smash hit movie “Avatar,” followed by much longer—and more interesting—new 3-D
undersea footage from his expeditions.
Haymet also spent a day with the German Wissenschaftsrat
(Council of Science and Humanities) chaired by Hilbert von Löhneysen who
invited large vessel operators to discuss the future of the German, European, and
global blue water fleets, and the need for large multipurpose vessels, some ice
capable.