Global Ethics Corner: Oceans, Garbage, and Food

Sep 25, 2009

Can we regulate international space like the oceans? Pollution and illegal or unregulated fishing plague international waters. How can the problem be managed to maintain the health and beauty of our seas?

Can we regulate international space like the oceans?

Captain Charles Moore of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation is exploring the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, an immense swirl of currents that accumulates floating garbage from Asia and the Americas.

Garbage is a hallmark of human civilization, and much of what we know about ancient cultures comes from their trash. What record will we leave?

Plastic. We live a limited time yet casually build and discard materials that persist for millennia. The captain speculates that future geologists may detect a unique sedimentary layer—call it the Plastocene.

What effect does this have on our food supply? Fish are a vital component, but many are under environmental and predatory pressure. Wild species are being polluted and fished to extinction.

Despite growing success with sustainable fisheries management, illegal and unregulated fishing plagues international waters.

In the developing world subsistence fishing communities are hard hit when large factory ships park offshore and scour the region.

Will the consumer choose sustainably labeled fish? Do we need stronger international laws to ensure fisheries' security? How should we maintain the health and beauty of our seas?

What do you think?

By Evan O'Neil

You may also like

OCT 8, 2025 Video

The Fracturing of Democratic Institutions & the Variations of Autocracy

In this pre-Global Ethics Day event, leading scholar practitioners grapple with critical questions regarding the future of democracy.

OCT 6, 2025 Article

A Conversation with Carnegie Ethics Fellow Molly Schaeffer

This interview series profiles members of the CEF cohort. This talk features Molly Schaeffer, executive director of the NYC Mayor's Office of Asylum Seeker Operations.

OCT 1, 2025 Podcast

The Cost of Military Primacy, with Peter Harris

Colorado State's Peter Harris discusses what a less militarized future might look like for the U.S. and the Trump administration's impact on foreign policy.

Not translated

This content has not yet been translated into your language. You can request a translation by clicking the button below.

Request Translation