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UN High Seas Treaty enters into force, drawing praise from NGOs

January 20, 2026 — NGOs are celebrating the entry into force of the United Nations Agreement on Marine Biological Diversity of Areas beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ Agreement), also widely known as the High Seas Treaty, after decades of work.

The High Seas Treaty officially entered into force on 17 January 2026 after crossing the ratification threshold in September 2025. The Pew Charitable Trusts said the new treaty will finally create a mechanism for the world to preserve two-thirds of the ocean lying outside national borders.

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

UN High Seas Treaty edges closer to coming into force

June 13, 2025 — The biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction (BBNJ) agreement, also referred to commonly as the High Seas Treaty, has moved closer to entering into force after 19 countries ratified the agreement during the United Nations Ocean Conference.

The High Seas Treaty is the result of a deal that was finalized in March 2023 after nearly 20 years of UN-facilitated talks. The treaty first opened for ratification in September 2023 and requires at least 60 countries to ratify the agreement in order to enter into force.

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

Will the new U.N. High Seas Treaty help protect Pacific salmon?

April 13, 2023 — The high seas — the ocean waters that begin 230 miles offshore — cover 43% of the planet’s surface and are home to as many as 10 million species, yet remain one of the least understood places on Earth. Among the region’s many mysteries are how Pacific salmon, one of the West’s most beloved and economically important fish, spend the majority of their lives — and why many populations are plummeting. Combined with how little we know about what climate change is doing out there, such questions make the area an international research and conservation priority.

These sprawling waters, though, are a mostly lawless zone, beyond the reaches of any national authority and governable only by international consensus and treaties. They face tremendous challenges that no nation can address alone: Climate change is causing marine heat waves and acidification, while overfishing and pollution are crippling ecosystems, even as pressure grows from companies and nations eager to drill and mine the ocean depths. In early March, negotiators representing nearly 200 nations came to a historic agreement aimed at protecting the ocean’s creatures and ecosystems. When the new United Nations High Seas Treaty was announced, marine scientists and conservationists around the globe rejoiced.

But what will the treaty actually mean for conservation in a region about which humanity knows less than the moon? When it comes to Pacific salmon, will the new treaty’s tools — and the international symbolism and momentum involved in agreeing to them — aid efforts to manage and protect them? Do the provisions go far enough? Here’s what the experts say.

Read the full article at High Country News

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