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Inter Press Service, June 4, 2004
ENVIRONMENT DAY: Oceans Shipwrecked
by Pollution and Indifference
BYLINE: Gustavo González
SANTIAGO, Jun 4 (IPS) - It is virtually irrelevant
for the United Nations to dedicate World Environment
Day this year to the conservation of the world's
seas and oceans, because there is no real awareness
of the severity of pollution and over-fishing,
environmental activist Marcel Claude told IPS.
Claude, vice-president of Oceana South America-Antarctica,
based in the Chilean capital, said the U.N.
decision was a step in the right direction,
but is no more than an chance to momentarily
place the plundering of ocean resources, which
few seem to care about, on the global agenda.
''There is no real presence of the issue in the
media, government agendas, or scientific research
in the universities,'' said the economist,
who specialises in the environment and development.
''Wanted! Seas and Oceans: Dead or Alive?'' is
the theme of this year's World Environment
Day, commemorated on Jun. 5
''The world's seas and oceans are becoming increasingly
tainted by untreated waste water, airborne
pollution, industrial effluent and silt from
inadequately managed watersheds,'' said U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan in a statement
issued ahead of World Environment Day.
''Marine litter is killing up to a million seabirds
and 100,000 sea mammals and turtles each year,''
he added. ''With more than 40 percent of the
human population already living within 60 kilometres
of a coast, and the proportion growing, these
problems are likely only to increase.''
According to U.N. studies, 70 percent of marine
species are over-exploited. That proportion
is also seen in the waters around Latin America,
although in Chile in particular, Oceana believes
that 95 percent of species are in a critical
condition, said Claude.
''The pollution of the oceans by oil spills,
mercury and persistent organic pollutants is
steadily increasing, and humanity, people,
are not fully aware of that,'' said the expert.
In a new report, Oceana underlines the need for
urgent action to prevent the continued dwindling
of the population of 70 percent of all fish
species, which are threatened by overfishing.
The report also states that nearly 60 percent
of the world's coral reefs are endangered by
destructive fishing practices, while of the
126 species of marine mammals, 88 are included
on the World Conservation Union (IUCN) Red
List of threatened species.
Industrial fishing practices are the biggest
culprits of predatory fishing.
''Drag fishing amounts to the veritable 'logging'
of the ocean floor,'' Claude told IPS, referring
to the technique by which heavily weighted
nets are dragged along the ocean floor, pulling
in fish and other animal and plant species,
while destroying everything in their path,
including coral reefs.
The bycatch, which includes large volumes of
fish that are discarded because they are too
small or have no commercial value, leads to
the annual global loss of around 20 million
tons of fish -- or a full 25 percent of the
total global catch.
According to Claude, in Chile the bycatch can
amount to as much as 80 percent of what is
caught in the nets, and especially involves
species like jurel (Caranx chrysos), Spanish
sardine (Sardinella aurita), and anchovy (Engraulis
ringens).
But industrial fishing is not the only threat
to the seas. In addition to oil spills and
other pollutants is the contamination generated
by the tourism industry's cruise ships and
ocean-liners, also dubbed ''floating cities''.
In six years the number of people travelling
along the Chilean coastline aboard cruise ships
has increased 500 percent, turning this tourist
industry into a "critical environmental
problem" because the preferred disembarkation
points are in Patagonia and Antarctica -- which
also happen to have the most pristine waters
and most fragile ecosystems.
"A typical cruise ship generates around
six tons of garbage a day, 114,000 litres of
sewage, 965,000 litres of dirty water from
showers, sinks, washing machines, bathrooms
and kitchens, 57 litres of toxic waste from
photo developing, dry cleaning and painting,
and diesel emissions equal to 12,000 automobiles,"
according to Oceana.
The campaign carried out by Greenpeace, Oceana
and other environmental groups against the
trans-Atlantic cruises achieved some success
this year, as the Royal Caribbean company installed
sewerage treatment systems on all its ships
and they are to be monitored regularly.
But to activists, positive steps like this might
seem barely a drop in the ocean, so to speak.
For Claude and other defenders of the sea it
is not a matter of only protecting ecological
balance, but also of insuring sustainable use
of marine resources for their contribution
to the human food supply.
In this sense, support and encouragement for
smaller fishing operations does not mean only
focussing on what many countries identify as
lower socio-economic sectors, but implies rational
economic and environmental efforts in a context
of sustainability, he said.
The Oceana vice-president told IPS that in Chile's
case, with its 4,500 km of coastline, fisherfolk
have access to just 20 percent of the catch
quotas, while the remaining 80 percent is assigned
to four big business groups.
"In Chile the fishing legislation is not
in keeping with the free market, which ensures
fair competition. Instead it protects those
who pillage instead of supporting those who
can carry out sustainable exploitation of the
resources and contribute to resolving food
shortages," said Claude.
<< Inter Press Service -- 6/4/04 >>
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