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WATER WORLD
World Bank proposes global coalition to save oceans
by Staff Writers
Singapore (AFP) Feb 24, 2012

Marshalls fine Japanese ship in shark fin ban
Majuro (AFP) Feb 24, 2012 - The Marshall Islands has fined a Japanese-operated fishing vessel $125,000 for violating a ban on shark fishing, officials said, in the first levy of its kind in the territory's waters.

Enforcement officer Marcella Tarkwon said a search of the ship Satsuma uncovered 27,000 kilograms (60,000 pounds) of shark carcasses and 680 kilograms of shark fins.

The Marshall Islands Marine Resources Authority said the fine was the first imposed since the introduction of a ban on trading shark fins across its vast waters late last year.

"The fine was based on it being the first offence and the value of the shark on board," she said.

Tarkwon said dozens of vessels, most of them legally fishing for tuna in the Marshalls' 1.9 million square kilometres (750,000 square miles) maritime exclusion zone, had been inspected and found to have shark aboard.

She said follow-up inspections had found warnings were proving effective, with no sign of sharks when officials reboarded the vessels.

Demand for shark fins has boomed in recent years to meet the growing popularity from Asia's burgeoning middle classes for the delicacy shark fin soup.

The Pew Environment Group estimates more than 70 million sharks are killed annually for their fins, leaving up to a third of open-water species on the brink of extinction.


The World Bank on Friday said the world's oceans were at risk and called for a coalition of governments, NGOs and other groups to protect them, aiming to raise $1.5 billion in five years.

"The worlds oceans are in danger," from over-fishing, marine degradation and loss of habitat, World Bank president Robert Zoellick said. "Send out the S-O-S: We need to Save Our Seas."

About 85 percent of ocean fisheries are fully exploited, over-exploited or depleted, including most of the stocks of the top 10 species, he told the World Oceans Summit in Singapore.

"The facts don't lie and the statistics are we are not doing enough, we are not accomplishing enough and the oceans continue to get sick and die," he said.

Zoellick said there were already "considerable resources devoted" to restoring the planet's oceans, but a huge, coordinated global effort was needed.

He proposed several targets for the Global Partnership for Oceans to achieve in the next 10 years, including rebuilding at least half of the world's fish stocks.

Marine protected areas should be more than doubled, he said, noting that less than two percent of the ocean's surface is protected compared to around 12 percent of land.

On the economic side alone the implications are enormous if little is done, he told the gathering.

In developing countries, one billion people depend on fish and seafood for their primary source of protein and over half a billion rely on fishing as a means of livelihood, Zoellick said.

For developing countries, including many island and coastal nations, fish represent the single most traded food product, and for many Pacific Island states fish make up 80 percent of total exports.

Zoellick described the initiative as a "new approach".

The coalition "will bring together countries, scientific centres, NGOs, international organisations, foundations and the private sector to pool knowledge, experience, expertise, and investment around a set of agreed upon goals," he said.

As a starting point, the partnership is committing to raise at least $300 million in "catalytic finance", meaning funds that would be used for technical assistance for key governance reforms, he said.

Another $1.2 billion would be raised "to support healthy and sustainable oceans," he added.

"This would total $1.5 billion in new commitments over five years," he said, adding that the World Bank would convene the first meeting of the partnership in Washington in April.

Environmental group World Wildlife Fund (WWF) lauded the initiative.

"WWF welcomes the renewed interest in the Bank in marine conservation activities. I think this is an important step forward to help all of us advance the marine conservation agenda," said Jason Clay, senior vice president of market transformation for the WWF.

He told AFP the proposal would help to reform global fisheries to make them more sustainable, raise the visibility of marine protected areas and promote ocean conservation to governments and the public.

Addressing the conference on Thursday, Kiribati President Anote Tong called for a change in the way humanity treated oceans.

"We must cease to behave as if we live in a cowboy economy, with unlimited new territory to be conquered," he said.

People must "learn to treat our oceans something like a spaceship where every effort has to be made to recycle materials, reduce waste and pollution and manage resources sustainably," he added.

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Eyes on Japan dolphin town after arrest: activist
Tokyo (AFP) Feb 24, 2012 - A Dutch supporter of environmentalist group Sea Shepherd, remanded in custody for two months on assault charges, said Friday world attention had been turned on the dolphin hunt town in Japan where he was held.

Erwin Vermeulen, 42, was put on remand in Taiji -- made famous by an Oscar-winning documentary -- for allegedly punching a man in December as he was stopped from entering an off-limits area near a secluded bay where the hunts take place.

However, a court on Wednesday acquitted him, saying testimony given by the alleged victim was not sufficient for a conviction.

Speaking at a news conference on Friday Vermeulen said: "My arrest, detention of two months and the trial have generated worldwide attention for the sake of dolphins in Taiji and for the Sea Shepherd in general.

"This exposure was funded by Japanese taxpayers' money."

The picturesque town came to global attention in 2010 after the release of "The Cove", a hard-hitting film about the annual hunts won an Academy Award for best documentary.

Every year the fishermen of Taiji corral about 2,000 dolphins into a secluded bay, select a few dozen for sale to aquariums and marine parks, and stab the rest to death for meat in a slaughter that turns the water red.

Sea Shepherd and its supporters descend on the tiny fishing town in Wakayama prefecture, western Japan, as they try to stop the hunt, often leading to heated disputes.

The town's fishermen defend the hunt as a cultural tradition, and "The Cove" was met by protests from right-wing activists when it was screened in Japan.

Scott West, a Sea Shepherd "operative" in the intelligence and investigations department, also said Japanese police and prosecutors helped the group's cause by arresting Vermeulen.

"The arrest and the intimidation backfired on the Wakayama authorities," West said at Friday's news conference. "Erwin paid the huge price for all of this attention, but it was significantly helpful to the cause."



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Marine protected areas: changing climate could require change of plans
Vancouver BC (SPX) Feb 24, 2012
Marine protected areas (MPAs) may turn out to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. As a result of changing conditions, marine species have been on the move with observed shifts of as much as three kilometres per year over the past 50 years, and forecasts of shifts of as much as 300 kilometres in the coming 50 years. Decisions on where to put MPAs weren't always made with a changing cli ... read more


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