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On and off screen, ‘Aquaman’ fights for world's oceans

Catarina Demony and Miguel Pereira (Reuters)
Carcavelos, Portugal
Mon, June 27, 2022

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On and off screen, ‘Aquaman’ fights for world's oceans Ocean warrior: United States actor Jason Momoa delivers a speech on Sunday during the Youth and Innovation Forum at Carcavelos beach in Oeiras, on the outskirts of Lisbon, Portugal. (AFP/Carlos Costa)

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em>In superhero blockbuster Aquaman, popular Hollywood actor Jason Momoa plays the role of protector of the deep, but with the world's oceans under threat in real life, he is also taking the fight off-screen.

"Without a healthy ocean life, our planet as we know [it] would not exist," Momoa said, with the sea behind him as he took part in an event on a Portuguese beach ahead of the 2022 United Nations Ocean Conference in Lisbon, which starts on Monday.

Around 7,000 people, from heads of state to environmental activists, are expected to attend the conference, which was postponed from 2020 to this year due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Dozens of youth activists from various countries clapped and cheered as Momoa, who will soon become the UN Environment Programme’s advocate for the sustainable development goal “Life below water”, spoke about the problems facing the world's oceans.

"We must seek to right the wrongs we have done against our children and grandchildren, turn the tide on our irresponsible stewardship and build momentum for a future where humanity can once again live in harmony with nature," said Momoa, 42.

Momoa is known for his role as Arthur Curry, a half-human, half-Atlantean character in DC Comics' Aquaman, which takes viewers to the underwater world of the seven seas. Aquaman 2 is scheduled for release in March 2023.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres joined Momoa at the event and apologized on behalf of his generation for not doing enough to tackle climate change, save the ocean and protect biodiversity.

"Even today, we are moving too slowly, […] we are still moving in the wrong direction," Guterres said, also pointing a finger at the fossil fuel industry. "It's time for these behaviors to be seriously condemned."

The ocean covers 70 percent of the planet's surface, generating over half of the world's oxygen and absorbing 25 percent of all carbon dioxide emissions, but climate change is increasing its temperature and causing sea levels to rise.

Eleven million metric tons of plastic end up in the ocean each year, a figure that's expected to triple by 2040 unless production and use of single-use plastics are reduced, multiple scientific studies show.

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