Pacific
Remote Islands Marine National Monument, which bans commercial fishing, to be
expanded to six times its current size
theguardian.com,
Suzanne Goldenberg, Thursday 25 September 2014
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A hermit crab emerges from its shell at Howland Island national wildlife refuge in the Pacific Ocean. Photograph: Alamy |
Barack
Obama will use his presidential powers on Thursday to create the world’s
largest marine reserve in the Pacific, banning fishing and other commercial
activities across vast swaths of pristine sea populated by whales, dolphins and
sea turtles and dotted with coral atolls.
Thursday’s
proclamation will expand the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument
reserve, created by George Bush, to about six times its current size.
It will ban
commercial fishing and deep sea mining in about 490,000 square miles around
remote tropical atolls and islands in the south-central Pacific Ocean, a White
House fact sheet said.
Other vast
swathes of the Pacific will also come under protection on Thursday, with the
tiny island state of Kiribati due to announce that it will ban commercial
fishing in one of the last great tuna grounds left in the world.
Kiribati’s
no-take zone, around the Phoenix Islands protected area, will cover about
158,000 sq m, about the size of California. It comes into effect in January
2015.
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Young boys cover each other in reef-mud near the village of Ambo on South Tarawa in the central Pacific island nation of Kiribati. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters |
Campaigners
said the Pacific Remote Islands reserve – because of its sheer scale – would
cement Obama’s conservation legacy.
However,
they noted that Obama had dramatically scaled back the reserve following
opposition from the commercial tuna industry.
The Marine
Conservation Institute had been pressing Obama to expand the marine park to the
fullest extent possible, around all seven islands and atolls, which would have
pushed the limits of the no-take areas to about 782,000 sq m instead of the
490,000 being announced on Thursday.
But after
protests from Hawaii-based tuna fleets, Obama opted to leave the seas around
four of those islands – Howland and Baker islands, Palmyra atoll and Kingman
Reef – open to fishing.
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The existing boundaries of the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument are outlined in light blue. The other Monuments, outlined in purple and green, are not being changed. Photograph: Noaa |
It was the
12th time Obama has bypassed Congress and used the antiquities act for
environmental protection.
“This is a
great moment,” said Greg Stone, chief scientist for Conservation International.
“This is some of the last real tropical ocean wilderness left on the planet, so
it’s good put some of these kind of reef systems aside. On top of that there
are the protections for the opean ocean and I’m assuming for the sea floor from
mining,” he said.
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Tarawa atoll. Photograph: Richard Vogel/AP |
The White
House said it created the marine park in response to changing ocean chemistry
caused by climate change.
“Expanding
the monument will more fully protect the deep coral reefs, seamounts, and
marine ecosystems unique to this part of the world, which are also among the
most vulnerable areas to the impacts of climate change and ocean
acidification,” it said.
It said the
expanded monument would broaden protection for wide-ranging marine species such
as whales, sea turtles and manta ray, as well as the millions of birds that
nest on the atolls.
“We have
very few places left in the ocean that are still near pristine and it is very
important to protect them,” said Enrique Sala, explorer-in-residence for
National Geographic.
Thursday’s
proclamation nearly doubles the expanse of ocean off limits to fishing and deep
sea mining, he said.
Obama has
adopted ocean protection as one of the signature issues of his second term –
with assistance from the secretary of state, John Kerry, who is a veteran
supporter of environmental causes.
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Pacific Ocean reserve Photograph: Guim
|
The proposal for a marine preserve was first floated last July at a state department ocean summit.
Catherine
Novelli, undersecretary of state for economic growth, energy and the
environment, said the administration was working with Kiribati and other small
island states to expand protections across the Pacific.
“These
marine protected areas are very important for the ocean. The reason why we are
going to get more countries to do them is because the whole biosphere,
including the fish, need to be able to regenerate,” she said. “If everyone is
just fishing, fishing, fishing, there is no space for that to occur.”
The state
department is launching an initiative with other governments and charitable
foundations on Thursday that will look at ways of enforcing no-take rules in
marine preserves, and cracking down on pirate fishing fleets.
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