Skip navigation
Journal article

First to finish, what comes next? Putting Capacity Building and the Transfer of Marine Technology under the BBNJ Agreement into practice

In this paper, the authors discuss the achievements in the BBNJ treaty regarding capacity building and the transfer of marine technology and propose recommendations for the implementation of the treaty.

Luciana Fernandes Coelho / Published on 26 January 2024

Read the paper  Open access

Citation

Harden-Davies, H., Lopes, V.F., Coelho, L.F. et al. (2024). First to finish, what comes next? Putting Capacity Building and the Transfer of Marine Technology under the BBNJ Agreement into practice. npj Ocean Sustainability, 3:3. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44183-023-00039-1.

The completion of negotiations on capacity building and the transfer of marine technology (CBTMT) was a critical milestone that paved the way for the adoption of a historic new UN ocean treaty that was twenty years in the making. The CBTMT part is crucial to enable the effective and equitable implementation of this treaty for the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity in the two-thirds of the ocean that lies beyond national jurisdiction.

The authors present key advances made by the treaty concerning the “what”, “how” and “why” of CBTMT, from including key definitions, a common vision, and mechanisms for diverse voices to drive action – to institutionalizing processes for funding and measuring of outcomes. They identify five key remaining questions and efforts needed to support the ratification of the treaty in the short term, and to prepare for implementation in the long term: (i) country-driven needs assessments and action plans; (ii) measures to monitor and review the quality of capacity building; (iii) support for key people and processes, including in relation to the Committee; (iv) information sharing and cooperation; (v) funding.

The authors argue that preparations for the implementation of the CBTMT provisions of the Agreement are needed now. They propose that governments, research organizations, non- and inter- governmental organizations and funding bodies engage in a coordinated effort to address the remaining questions, strengthen confidence towards the ratification of the treaty, and ensure that the advances made by the treaty on paper are put into practice.

Read the paper

Open access

SEI author

Luciana Coelho
Luciana Fernandes Coelho

Research Fellow

SEI Headquarters

Design and development by Soapbox.