Reconstruyendo la confianza en la gobernanza multilateral: Lecciones desde el fondo marino para la COP 30

A deep-sea octopus on the seabead in Hudson Canyon, located off the Atlantic Coast of the United States. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office of Ocean (NOAA) Exploration and Research
The remotely operated vehicle Deep Discoverer approaches the ghostlike octopus at 4,290 m during the first operational dive of the 2016 Okeanos Explorer season. Credit: NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research, Hohonu Moana 2016.
The ROV Deep Discoverer is recovered after its successful first dive — part of NOAA’s efforts to explore and document the deep ocean. Credit: NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research, Hohonu Moana 2016.

Ya sea en materia de clima, biodiversidad o aguas profundas, la confianza pública en la toma de decisiones por parte de las instituciones globales se ha vuelto tan importante como las decisiones mismas.

¿Quién está protegiendo el medio ambiente de la Antártida?

Neumayer Channel in the Antarctic Peninsula, January 2020. Antarctica's ice and its biological communities face grave, systemic threats from global climate change. Photo: Alessandro Antonello
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres (third from right, seated) on his way to the Base General Bernardo O'Higgins in Antarctica, where he witnessed first-hand the deadly impacts of the climate crisis, 23 November 2023. UN Photo/Mark Garten
In 2023, Secretary-General António Guterres visited Antarctica to witness the impacts of the climate crisis, 22 November 2023. UN Photo/Mark Garten

El Sistema del Tratado Antártico, vigente desde 1961, se dedica principalmente a las amenazas ambientales que surgen a nivel local, incluidas las de la pesca, el turismo y la investigación científica.