WORLD’S LARGEST MARINE PROTECTED AREA ONE STEP CLOSER


Environmental Panorama
International
May of 2009


19 May 2009 - What may become the world's largest marine protected area came a step closer today following the announcement by Australia’s environment minister Peter Garrett that the Coral Sea would become a Conservation Zone.

The area, which is found east of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef Marine park and amounts to almost a million square kilometers, is home to significant seabirds and migratory marine species, and has remained relatively undisturbed by direct human impact.;

“The Coral sea is one of the world’s healthiest marine wilderness areas, where it is still possible to see healthy populations of sharks, turtles, whales, fish and coral” said Lydia Gibson, WWF’s Marine Policy Manager in the region.

Under the conservation zone designation, current tourism and fishing activities can continue, but new commercial activity will be rigorously assessed while the government evaluates the region for its conservation value.

WWF worked with government and stakeholders to develop a set of criteria which Mr. Garrett says will be included in the final plan for the conservation of the Coral Sea.

“The pressures on our oceans are increasing and we need to take steps to protect our fragile marine environments,” Mr Garrett.

These criteria include the establishment of the protected area by 2011, ruling out oil and gas exploration and the creation of high-conservation zones within the Marine Protected Area.

This news comes shortly after the commitment last week by the six leaders of the Coral Triangle countries – Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Solomon Islands and Timor Leste – to protect the region by implementing a 10-year regional plan of action with time-bound steps to address growing threats to the region’s threatened species and other marine and coastal living resources.

“As climate change begins to effect ecosystems around the world, including the Coral Sea, marine protected areas provide a buffer zone, allowing species to adapt to the changes. WWF would like to see a chain of interconnected marine protected areas across the world, giving marine species the greatest chance of survival” said Ms. Gibson.

The existing Coral Sea national nature reserves – Coringa-Herald and Lihou Reef reserves, and the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, are not included in the conservation zone.

+ More

Cruise liners’ pledge to keep sewage out of fragile Baltic Sea –WWF

19 May 2009 - Major cruise ships will stop dumping sewage in the Baltic Sea if ports will put in place facilities allowing to remove waste, ECC, a cruise-liner organization announced today.

ECC said it would abandon the damaging practice if “adequate port reception facilities
which operate under a ‘no special fee’ will be made available.
WWF, which two years ago asked ferry lines and cruise ship companies for a voluntary ban on waste-water discharge, welcomed the decision as a really important step forward.

The Baltic Sea receives more than 350 cruise ship visits with over 2,100 port calls each year. The wastewater produced in these vessels is estimated to contain 113 tons of nitrogen and 38 tons of phosphorus, substances that add to eutrophication of the sea. Until now, most of this sewage has been is discharged into the Baltic Sea.

“We are very happy that the cruise companies have taken this decision,” said Dr. Anita Mäkinen, Head of the Marine Programme at WWF Finland. “The dumping of untreated waste water straight out into the Baltic Sea poses an
unnecessary threat to the sensitive nature of the Baltic Sea environment.”

In addition to excess nutrients, the waste water also contains bacteria, viruses and
other pathogens, as well as heavy metals

Eutrophication is considered by many the main environmental problem of the Baltic Sea, causing both biological and economic damage to marine environment and coastal areas. It is caused by an overload of nutrients, such as phosphorus and nitrogen, into the ecosystem.

It causes many problems, including unusually strong and frequent summertime algae blooms such as the toxic cyanobacteria.

Today there are only three out of more than 20 cruise ships ports around the Baltic Sea, Helsinki, Stockholm and Visby, that meet ECC’s conditions

The normal sewage storage capacity for a cruise ship is between one and three days. This means in praxis that a lot of sewage will still be dumped in the sea.

According to WWF, the announcement is a step in the right direction.

“We see this as a step in the right direction”, says Dr. Anita Mäkinen, Head of the Marine Programme at

“We now call on the cruise lines to work together with us to put pressure on the ports and their owners to establish sufficient port facilities”, says Pauli Merriman, Director of the WWF Baltic Ecoregion Programme.

“We consider it to be the responsibility of any country or city that wants to receive these
cruise ships, to offer adequate sewage reception facilities.”

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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