Dealing with Ocean Acidification: The Problem, the Clean Water Act, and State and Regional Approaches

Ocean acidification is often referred to as climate change’s “evil twin.” As the global ocean continually absorbs much of the anthropogenic carbon dioxide produced through the burning of fossil fuels, its pH is dropping, causing a plethora of chemical, biological, and ecological impacts. These impac...

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Main Author: Craig, Robin Kundis
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UW Law Digital Commons 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/wlr/vol90/iss4/3
https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/context/wlr/article/4884/viewcontent/dea.pdf
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spelling ftuwashingtonsl:oai:digitalcommons.law.uw.edu:wlr-4884 2023-06-11T04:15:29+02:00 Dealing with Ocean Acidification: The Problem, the Clean Water Act, and State and Regional Approaches Craig, Robin Kundis 2015-12-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/wlr/vol90/iss4/3 https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/context/wlr/article/4884/viewcontent/dea.pdf unknown UW Law Digital Commons https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/wlr/vol90/iss4/3 https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/context/wlr/article/4884/viewcontent/dea.pdf Washington Law Review Environmental Law Water Law text 2015 ftuwashingtonsl 2023-05-07T17:37:36Z Ocean acidification is often referred to as climate change’s “evil twin.” As the global ocean continually absorbs much of the anthropogenic carbon dioxide produced through the burning of fossil fuels, its pH is dropping, causing a plethora of chemical, biological, and ecological impacts. These impacts immediately threaten local and regional fisheries and marine aquaculture; over the long term, they pose the risk of a global mass extinction event. As with climate change itself, the ultimate solution to ocean acidification is a worldwide reduction in carbon dioxide emissions. In the interim, however, environmental groups such as the Center for Biological Diversity have worked to apply the federal Clean Water Act to ocean acidification, while states and coastal regions are increasingly pursuing more broadly focused responses to ocean acidification’s local and regional impacts. This Article provides a first assessment of these relatively nascent legal efforts to address ocean acidification. It concludes first that ocean acidification should prompt renewed Clean Water Act attention to stormwater runoff and nutrient pollution. However, this Article also demonstrates that improved implementation of the Clean Water Act will not be enough. The realities of ocean acidification require more comprehensive legal and policy innovations so that coastal states and regions can adapt to its impacts now and into the future. Text Ocean acidification UW Law Digital Commons (University of Washington)
institution Open Polar
collection UW Law Digital Commons (University of Washington)
op_collection_id ftuwashingtonsl
language unknown
topic Environmental Law
Water Law
spellingShingle Environmental Law
Water Law
Craig, Robin Kundis
Dealing with Ocean Acidification: The Problem, the Clean Water Act, and State and Regional Approaches
topic_facet Environmental Law
Water Law
description Ocean acidification is often referred to as climate change’s “evil twin.” As the global ocean continually absorbs much of the anthropogenic carbon dioxide produced through the burning of fossil fuels, its pH is dropping, causing a plethora of chemical, biological, and ecological impacts. These impacts immediately threaten local and regional fisheries and marine aquaculture; over the long term, they pose the risk of a global mass extinction event. As with climate change itself, the ultimate solution to ocean acidification is a worldwide reduction in carbon dioxide emissions. In the interim, however, environmental groups such as the Center for Biological Diversity have worked to apply the federal Clean Water Act to ocean acidification, while states and coastal regions are increasingly pursuing more broadly focused responses to ocean acidification’s local and regional impacts. This Article provides a first assessment of these relatively nascent legal efforts to address ocean acidification. It concludes first that ocean acidification should prompt renewed Clean Water Act attention to stormwater runoff and nutrient pollution. However, this Article also demonstrates that improved implementation of the Clean Water Act will not be enough. The realities of ocean acidification require more comprehensive legal and policy innovations so that coastal states and regions can adapt to its impacts now and into the future.
format Text
author Craig, Robin Kundis
author_facet Craig, Robin Kundis
author_sort Craig, Robin Kundis
title Dealing with Ocean Acidification: The Problem, the Clean Water Act, and State and Regional Approaches
title_short Dealing with Ocean Acidification: The Problem, the Clean Water Act, and State and Regional Approaches
title_full Dealing with Ocean Acidification: The Problem, the Clean Water Act, and State and Regional Approaches
title_fullStr Dealing with Ocean Acidification: The Problem, the Clean Water Act, and State and Regional Approaches
title_full_unstemmed Dealing with Ocean Acidification: The Problem, the Clean Water Act, and State and Regional Approaches
title_sort dealing with ocean acidification: the problem, the clean water act, and state and regional approaches
publisher UW Law Digital Commons
publishDate 2015
url https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/wlr/vol90/iss4/3
https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/context/wlr/article/4884/viewcontent/dea.pdf
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Washington Law Review
op_relation https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/wlr/vol90/iss4/3
https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/context/wlr/article/4884/viewcontent/dea.pdf
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