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The California Academy of Sciences joins leading U.S. aquariums to support national action on climate and ocean conservation

California Academy of Sciences joins leading U.S. aquariums to support action on climate and ocean conservation

SAN FRANCISCO (January 28, 2021) — As the nation’s leading aquariums committed to ocean and freshwater conservation, we fully support the Biden-Harris Administration’s bold actions to assert U.S. leadership in the fight against global climate change.

We celebrate yesterday’s clear mandate for a government-wide approach to addressing the climate crisis that focuses on scientific integrity, environmental justice, and job creation. Through actions like rejoining the Paris Agreement, initiating the rollback of environmentally damaging federal regulations of the past four years, working with State, local, Tribal, and territorial governments and stakeholders to achieve the goal of conserving at least 30 percent of our federal lands and waters by 2030, the Biden-Harris Administration is setting a course for our nation that acknowledges the role that a healthy ocean, lakes, and rivers play in addressing the climate crisis and increasing our national prosperity.

We recognize that climate change is the greatest threat to the future of our planet, of people, and of our ocean and freshwater systems. For the well-being of people and all life on Earth, we must take immediate and significant action to address the climate crisis. Climate action can produce local economic benefits, generate new jobs, restore public lands and waters, and engage current and future generations to help rebuild our infrastructure and create a clean-energy future. We must also ensure that communities bearing the brunt of climate impacts are fully involved in designing equitable strategies for a path forward.

“Now is the time for bold action to protect the future of our planet,” says Dr. Scott Sampson, Executive Director of the California Academy of Sciences. “We are proud to partner with our aquarium colleagues to engage, educate, and empower the communities that we serve with solutions that will restore and regenerate our natural world for generations to come.”

To fight climate change, we need a healthy ocean. Our ocean has already absorbed 25 percent of the carbon dioxide generated by human activities, and more than 90 percent of the excess heat. But these services have come at a tremendous cost. By altering the chemistry and temperature of the ocean, we have put marine ecosystems and wildlife at increasing risk. The life-giving benefits we derive from ocean and freshwater systems—including food and water, transportation, defense, tourism, and other enterprises—underpin our global prosperity.

Our ocean, lakes, and rivers are also sources of climate solutions. Together, we can build resilience to the impacts of climate change by restoring and conserving natural habitats, curbing pollution, and managing fisheries and other natural resources in sustainable ways. We also can protect and restore our tidal marshes, seagrasses, wetlands, and mangroves that sequester atmospheric carbon, and develop new offshore sources of renewable energy in an environmentally responsible way.

Our aquariums, which make up the Aquarium Conservation Partnership, play unique and powerful roles in promoting climate solutions. We are trusted science-based communicators, conservation stewards, and local business leaders. We are committed to working with our communities, government leaders, business partners, and public audiences to meet these challenges and accelerate the pace of progress for our planet.

We are eager to work with the Biden-Harris Administration, Congress, and other leaders across the country to step up efforts to protect the nation’s invaluable ocean and freshwater resources, strengthen the resilience of our communities, and accelerate solutions to the climate crisis.

Scott D. Sampson, PhD Executive Director, William R. and Gretchen B. Kimball Chair California Academy of Sciences

Dr. Peter Kareiva CEO, Aquarium of the Pacific

Ron Forman President and CEO, Audubon Nature Institute of New Orleans

Jason Patlis President & CEO, The Maritime Aquarium at Norwalk

Julie Packard Executive Director, Monterey Bay Aquarium

Stephen Coan President & CEO, Mystic Aquarium

John Racanelli CEO, National Aquarium

Kurt Strand President & CEO, The National Mississippi River Museum & Aquarium

Maylon White Division Director, North Carolina Aquariums

Vikki Spruill President & CEO, New England Aquarium

Dennis Pate CEO, Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo & Aquarium

Alan Varsik Director, Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium

Carrie Lewis President and CEO, Oregon Coast Aquarium

Robert Davidson CEO, Seattle Aquarium

Bridget C. Coughlin, PhD President and CEO, John G. Shedd Aquarium

Kevin Mills President and CEO, South Carolina Aquarium

Keith Sanford President and CEO, Tennessee Aquarium

Roger Germann President/CEO, The Florida Aquarium

Cynthia Whitbred-Spanoulis Executive Director, Virginia Aquarium & Marine Science Center

John F. Calvelli Executive Vice President, Government Affairs, Wildlife Conservation Society