1 00:00:22,627 --> 00:00:26,960 Do you ever think about how important the oceans are in our daily lives? 2 00:00:28,830 --> 00:00:31,576 The oceans cover two-thirds of our planet. 3 00:00:32,189 --> 00:00:34,591 They provide half the oxygen we breathe. 4 00:00:35,036 --> 00:00:36,690 They moderate our climate. 5 00:00:37,055 --> 00:00:40,832 And they provide jobs and medicine and food 6 00:00:41,181 --> 00:00:46,125 including 20 percent of protein to feed the entire world population. 7 00:00:47,331 --> 00:00:49,847 People used to think that the oceans were so vast 8 00:00:49,872 --> 00:00:52,332 that they wouldn't be affected by human activities. 9 00:00:53,605 --> 00:00:56,891 Well today I'm going to tell you about a serious reality 10 00:00:56,916 --> 00:01:01,548 that is changing our oceans called ocean acidification, 11 00:01:01,763 --> 00:01:04,128 or the evil twin of climate change. 12 00:01:06,200 --> 00:01:11,622 Did you know that the oceans have absorbed 25 percent of all of the carbon dioxide 13 00:01:11,647 --> 00:01:13,890 that we have emitted to the atmosphere? 14 00:01:14,270 --> 00:01:17,908 Now this is just another great service provided by the oceans 15 00:01:17,933 --> 00:01:20,802 since carbon dioxide is one of the greenhouse gases 16 00:01:20,827 --> 00:01:22,583 that's causing climate change. 17 00:01:23,610 --> 00:01:27,646 But as we keep pumping more and more and more 18 00:01:27,672 --> 00:01:30,164 carbon dioxide into the atmosphere 19 00:01:30,330 --> 00:01:32,783 more is dissolving into the oceans. 20 00:01:33,103 --> 00:01:36,023 And this is what's changing our ocean chemistry. 21 00:01:37,650 --> 00:01:40,038 When carbon dioxide dissolves in seawater, 22 00:01:40,063 --> 00:01:42,301 it undergoes a number of chemical reactions. 23 00:01:42,720 --> 00:01:43,885 Now lucky for you, 24 00:01:43,910 --> 00:01:47,195 I don't have time to get into the details of the chemistry for today. 25 00:01:47,688 --> 00:01:51,012 But I'll tell you as more carbon dioxide enters the ocean, 26 00:01:51,037 --> 00:01:53,394 the seawater pH goes down. 27 00:01:54,030 --> 00:01:57,997 And this basically means that there is an increase in ocean acidity. 28 00:01:58,648 --> 00:02:02,770 And this whole process is called ocean acidification. 29 00:02:03,204 --> 00:02:05,930 And it's happening alongside climate change. 30 00:02:07,856 --> 00:02:11,959 Scientists have been monitoring ocean acidification for over two decades. 31 00:02:12,498 --> 00:02:15,171 This figure is an important time series in Hawaii, 32 00:02:15,196 --> 00:02:20,091 and the top line shows steadily increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide, 33 00:02:20,116 --> 00:02:22,631 or CO2 gas, in the atmosphere. 34 00:02:22,742 --> 00:02:25,988 And this is directly as a result of human activities. 35 00:02:26,840 --> 00:02:30,871 The line underneath shows the increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide 36 00:02:30,896 --> 00:02:33,832 that is dissolved in the surface of the ocean 37 00:02:34,078 --> 00:02:37,037 which you can see is increasing at the same rate 38 00:02:37,062 --> 00:02:40,236 as carbon dioxide in the atmosphere since measurements began. 39 00:02:42,227 --> 00:02:45,234 The line on the bottom shows then shows the change in chemistry. 40 00:02:45,259 --> 00:02:48,085 As more carbon dioxide has entered the ocean, 41 00:02:48,110 --> 00:02:50,356 the seawater pH has gone down, 42 00:02:51,051 --> 00:02:55,098 which basically means there has been an increase in ocean acidity. 43 00:02:56,685 --> 00:03:00,755 Now in Ireland, scientists are also monitoring ocean acidification -- 44 00:03:00,780 --> 00:03:03,573 scientists at the Marine Institute and NUI Galway. 45 00:03:03,724 --> 00:03:07,873 And we, too, are seeing acidification at the same rate 46 00:03:07,898 --> 00:03:10,905 as these main ocean time-series sites around the world. 47 00:03:11,366 --> 00:03:14,420 So it's happening right at our doorstep. 48 00:03:15,870 --> 00:03:19,028 Now I'd like to give you an example of just how we collect our data 49 00:03:19,053 --> 00:03:21,306 to monitor a changing ocean. 50 00:03:22,289 --> 00:03:25,344 Firstly we collect a lot of our samples in the middle of winter. 51 00:03:25,369 --> 00:03:27,508 So as you can imagine, in the North Atlantic 52 00:03:27,533 --> 00:03:30,138 we get hit with some seriously stormy conditions -- 53 00:03:30,163 --> 00:03:32,796 so not for any of you who get a little motion sickness, 54 00:03:33,407 --> 00:03:35,835 but we are collecting some very valuable data. 55 00:03:36,792 --> 00:03:39,671 So we lower this instrument over the side of the ship, 56 00:03:39,696 --> 00:03:42,132 and there are sensors that are mounted on the bottom 57 00:03:42,157 --> 00:03:44,830 that can tell us information about the surrounding water, 58 00:03:44,855 --> 00:03:47,275 such as temperature or dissolved oxygen. 59 00:03:47,750 --> 00:03:51,565 And then we can collect our seawater samples in these large bottles. 60 00:03:51,732 --> 00:03:54,984 So we start at the bottom, which can be over four kilometers deep 61 00:03:55,009 --> 00:03:56,866 just off our continental shelf, 62 00:03:57,112 --> 00:04:00,778 and we take samples at regular intervals right up to the surface. 63 00:04:01,675 --> 00:04:03,936 We take the seawater back on the deck, 64 00:04:04,071 --> 00:04:06,450 and then we can either analyze them on the ship 65 00:04:06,475 --> 00:04:09,610 or back in the laboratory for the different chemicals parameters. 66 00:04:11,267 --> 00:04:12,553 But why should we care? 67 00:04:13,551 --> 00:04:17,995 How is ocean acidification going to affect all of us? 68 00:04:19,654 --> 00:04:22,566 Well, here are the worrying facts. 69 00:04:23,677 --> 00:04:29,479 There has already been an increase in ocean acidity of 26 percent 70 00:04:29,504 --> 00:04:33,511 since pre-industrial times, which is directly due to human activities. 71 00:04:35,251 --> 00:04:39,338 Unless we can start slowing down our carbon dioxide emissions, 72 00:04:39,631 --> 00:04:45,568 we're expecting an increase in ocean acidity of 170 percent 73 00:04:45,988 --> 00:04:48,337 by the end of this century. 74 00:04:49,313 --> 00:04:51,646 I mean this is within our children's lifetime. 75 00:04:53,105 --> 00:04:58,723 This rate of acidification is 10 times faster 76 00:04:58,748 --> 00:05:05,169 than any acidification in our oceans for over 55 million years. 77 00:05:06,360 --> 00:05:10,731 So our marine life have never, ever experienced 78 00:05:10,756 --> 00:05:13,525 such a fast rate of change before. 79 00:05:13,851 --> 00:05:17,750 So we literally could not know how they're going to cope. 80 00:05:19,435 --> 00:05:24,021 Now there was a natural acidification event millions of years ago, 81 00:05:24,046 --> 00:05:27,654 which was much slower than what we're seeing today. 82 00:05:28,080 --> 00:05:33,155 And this coincided with a mass extinction of many marine species. 83 00:05:34,491 --> 00:05:36,078 So is that what we're headed for? 84 00:05:36,870 --> 00:05:38,020 Well, maybe. 85 00:05:38,631 --> 00:05:42,123 Studies are showing some species are actually doing quite well 86 00:05:42,148 --> 00:05:45,138 but many are showing a negative response. 87 00:05:47,586 --> 00:05:51,633 One of the big concerns is as ocean acidity increases, 88 00:05:51,927 --> 00:05:56,181 the concentration of carbonate ions in seawater decrease. 89 00:05:56,990 --> 00:05:59,901 Now these ions are basically the building blocks 90 00:05:59,926 --> 00:06:02,727 for many marine species to make their shells, 91 00:06:03,559 --> 00:06:08,114 for example crabs or mussels, oysters. 92 00:06:09,074 --> 00:06:11,034 Another example are corals. 93 00:06:11,232 --> 00:06:14,413 They also need these carbonate ions in seawater 94 00:06:14,438 --> 00:06:18,343 to make their coral structure in order to build coral reefs. 95 00:06:19,667 --> 00:06:21,857 As ocean acidity increases 96 00:06:22,079 --> 00:06:25,309 and the concentration of carbonate ions decrease, 97 00:06:25,762 --> 00:06:30,222 these species first find it more difficult to make their shells. 98 00:06:30,531 --> 00:06:34,340 And at even even lower levels, they can actually begin to dissolve. 99 00:06:36,215 --> 00:06:39,278 This here is a pteropod, it's called a sea butterfly. 100 00:06:39,516 --> 00:06:42,690 And it's an important food source in the ocean for many species, 101 00:06:42,952 --> 00:06:46,475 from krill to salmon right up to whales. 102 00:06:47,788 --> 00:06:51,302 The shell of the pteropod was placed into seawater 103 00:06:51,327 --> 00:06:54,747 at a pH that we're expecting by the end of this century. 104 00:06:56,504 --> 00:07:01,996 After only 45 days at this very realistic pH, 105 00:07:02,340 --> 00:07:06,482 you can see the shell has almost completely dissolved. 106 00:07:08,355 --> 00:07:12,489 So ocean acidification could affect right up through the food chain -- 107 00:07:12,624 --> 00:07:14,735 and right onto our dinner plates. 108 00:07:15,274 --> 00:07:18,916 I mean who here likes shellfish? Or salmon? 109 00:07:19,482 --> 00:07:21,110 Or many other fish species 110 00:07:21,135 --> 00:07:23,978 whose food source in the ocean could be affected? 111 00:07:26,926 --> 00:07:28,773 These are cold-water corals. 112 00:07:28,912 --> 00:07:32,445 And did you know we actually have cold-water corals in Irish waters, 113 00:07:32,470 --> 00:07:34,317 just off our continental shelf? 114 00:07:34,823 --> 00:07:38,942 And they support rich biodiversity, including some very important fisheries. 115 00:07:40,356 --> 00:07:43,443 It's projected that by the end of this century, 116 00:07:43,526 --> 00:07:49,490 70 percent of all known cold-water corals in the entire ocean 117 00:07:50,077 --> 00:07:54,771 will be surrounded by seawater that is dissolving their coral structure. 118 00:07:58,350 --> 00:08:02,008 The last example I have are these healthy tropical corals. 119 00:08:02,572 --> 00:08:07,320 They were placed in seawater at a pH we're expecting by the year 2100. 120 00:08:08,984 --> 00:08:14,498 After six months, the coral has almost completely dissolved. 121 00:08:15,670 --> 00:08:18,035 Now coral reefs support 122 00:08:18,106 --> 00:08:24,633 25 percent of all marine life in the entire ocean. 123 00:08:25,370 --> 00:08:26,520 All marine life. 124 00:08:27,568 --> 00:08:31,893 So you can see: ocean acidification is a global threat. 125 00:08:33,138 --> 00:08:35,260 I have an eight-month-old baby boy. 126 00:08:36,080 --> 00:08:39,937 Unless we start now to slow this down, 127 00:08:40,102 --> 00:08:44,468 I dread to think what our oceans will look like when he's a grown man. 128 00:08:45,800 --> 00:08:47,768 We will see acidification. 129 00:08:47,930 --> 00:08:52,170 We have already put too much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. 130 00:08:53,130 --> 00:08:55,812 But we can slow this down. 131 00:08:56,196 --> 00:09:00,572 We can prevent the worst-case scenario. 132 00:09:00,850 --> 00:09:03,034 The only way of doing that 133 00:09:03,113 --> 00:09:06,417 is by reducing our carbon dioxide emissions. 134 00:09:07,110 --> 00:09:11,516 This is important for both you and I, for industry, for governments. 135 00:09:11,700 --> 00:09:15,755 We need to work together, slow down ocean acidification 136 00:09:15,977 --> 00:09:18,855 and then we can slow down global warming 137 00:09:18,911 --> 00:09:21,529 slow down ocean acidification, 138 00:09:21,580 --> 00:09:26,313 and help to maintain a healthy ocean and a healthy planet 139 00:09:26,339 --> 00:09:29,630 for our generation and for generations to come. 140 00:09:31,624 --> 00:09:36,127 (Applause)