This week the Bermuda Cabinet approved the appointment of two international experts to the Sargasso Sea Commission.
The Sargasso Sea Commission was established by the Hamilton Declaration on Collaboration for the Conservation of the Sargasso Sea, signed in Bermuda on March 11, 2014. The Commission celebrated its five year anniversary last year with a workshop held at the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences in March 2019.
The two incoming Commissioners are Professor Howard Roe, Emeritus Professor at the University of Southampton (serving a third term); and Mrs. Rochelle Newbold, Acting Director of The Bahamas Environment, Science & Technology Commission. They will each serve a three-year term in their personal capacity.
The Declaration requires that the Commissioners themselves be “distinguished scientists and other persons of international repute committed to the conservation of high seas ecosystems that would serve in their personal capacity.”
The new Commissioners will work alongside current Commissioners Dr. Tammy Warren, Professor Stephen de Mora, Mr. Mark Spalding, Sen. Wilfred Moore, and Mr. Frederico Cardigos.
The Minister of Home Affairs the Hon. Walter Roban JP MP said, “My Ministry is pleased to be leading the work of the Government of Bermuda in support of the Sargasso Sea Commission, which has already established itself as a unique and important player in its critical work as a steward of the Sargasso Sea.”
David Freestone, Executive Secretary of the Sargasso Sea Commission, warmly welcomed the appointments. He said, “We are delighted to have the continued support of the Government of Bermuda, but also of the United Kingdom and The Bahamas within the Commission. These appointments further strengthen the Commission team as we move into the next decade of the project.”
The Sargasso Sea Commission is appointed by the Government of Bermuda with the support of the ten Government Signatories of the Hamilton Declaration. Its formal role is to act as the Steward of this iconic high seas ecosystem and to keep its health, productivity, and resilience under review, as well as to develop safeguard measures for its conservation.
As of January 2020, the ten Signatory Governments to the Hamilton Declaration are the Azores, the Bahamas, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Canada, Cayman Islands, the Dominican Republic, the Principality of Monaco, the United Kingdom and the United States.