And yet that quote doesn't contradict what I said.
You said this in your previous comment and now you're shifting this discussion.
We've established that this is simply
not true.
Here is what the
Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO has to say about it:
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"deoxygenation is worsening in the coastal and open ocean. This is mainly the result of human activities that are increasing global temperatures (CO2-induced warming) and increasing loads of nutrients from agriculture, sewage, and industrial waste, including pollution from power generation from fossil fuels and biomass."
I think you fail to grasp what the issue here is and what the articles are talking about.
This isn't about the creation of dead zones, this is about the exacerbation in size at an excessive rate.
I never denied that pollution had a hand in creating dead zones, but the fact that dead zones have quadrupled in size is
primarily caused by climate change as these sources point out.
Either way, both pollution and climate change are tied together and both are mainly man-made problems. So there's not much point in us arguing over the minutiae of it all since we both already agree that there needs to be excessive action taken on both fronts.