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Minggu, 18 Desember 2011

Stricken Russian boat in 'precarious position'

Google/AFP, 18 December 2011 

The Russian fishing boat Sparta, near the Antarctic ice shelf (AFP/USAF/File)

WELLINGTON— A stricken Russian fishing vessel stranded in icy Antarctic waters was in a"precarious position" Sunday, New Zealand rescuers said two daysafter the vessel was holed by an iceberg.

The crew ofthe Sparta had a scare overnight when temporary patches placed over the damagedsection of hull failed and the boat began taking on water again.

But severalhours later they reported they again had the situation under control.

TheRussian-flagged Sparta, with a crew of 32, sent out a distress call earlyFriday from near the Antarctic ice shelf when it was holed 1.5 metres below thewater line and started to list.

It will beseveral days before rescue ships can make their way through heavy sea ice toreach the vessel about 2,000 nautical miles (3,704 kilometres) southeast of NewZealand.

However, aNew Zealand Air Force Hercules was able to fly over the Sparta late Saturdayand drop off extra pumping equipment and fuel.

"Spartaremained in a precarious position," New Zealand search and rescuecoordinator Dave Wilson said.

"Thishighlights the importance of the mission in delivering the pumping equipmentyesterday. 

This equipment has enabled them to get on top of the water ingressagain, and they will now be working to fix the patches more securely."

Wilson saidwith rescue still days away, the stabilisation work was vital for the vesseland its crew.

"Theyhave life rafts but with the conditions down there, it?s much safer for them ifthey can wait for rescue on board their vessel."

Twovessels, the Sel Jevaer and Chiyo Maru No 3 were struggling to navigate acircuitous route through the ice and would take several days to reach Sparta?sposition.

A SouthKorean icebreaker, Araon, which was docked in New Zealand, has beencommissioned by the Sparta's owners to assist. It set sail early Sunday andwill take eight days to reach the area.

A NewZealand fishing boat, San Aspiring, was pulled from the rescue operation onSaturday after advising conditions were too difficult for it to proceed.

"SanAspiring was 470 nautical miles away from Sparta but would have had to travelmuch further than that to reach the vessel, because there was no direct linethrough the ice," Wilson said.

"Theyconfirmed the journey would take too long and would potentially put their owncrew in danger."


SouthKorean icebreaker Araon, left, approaches the Russian ship Sparta
which  hasbeen trapped due to an accident, in the Antarctic on Sunday.
(EPA Photo)


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Kamis, 24 November 2011

Shark fin goes off the menu at Peninsula hotels

The movewill affect the group's nine hotels, including those in China and Hong Kong,the center of the global shark fin market

guardian.co.uk,Justin McCurry in Osaka,  Thursday 24November 2011

73 million sharks are killed yearly for shark fin soup.
Photograph: Paul Hilton/EPA

Environmentalgroups are claiming a significant victory in the campaign to save the globalshark population, after the Peninsula hotel group said it would stop servingshark fin dishes from January.

Peninsula,one of Asia's most prestigious hotel chains, said on Monday it would no longersell the dishes, considered a delicacy in Hong Kong and other parts of theregion, "in recognition of the threat facing the global shark populationand in line with the company's sustainability vision".

The movewill affect the group's nine hotels, including those in China and Hong Kong,the center of the global shark fin market.

Hong Konghandles between 50% and 80% of the global trade in shark fins, bringing incatches from more than 100 countries, with Spain its biggest supplier. In 2006it took delivery of more than 10,000 tonnes worth US$276m, according to the UNfood and agricultural organisation.

Most isconsumed in Hong Kong and Taiwan, but also in mainland provinces such asGuangdong, where its consumption has become a status symbol among China'snouveau riche.

Hong Kongand Shanghai Hotels, which owns the Peninsula group, said it would honourrequests for shark fin soup made before 21 November, for consumption after 1January.

The dish,which comprises pieces of rehydrated shark fin in a rich broth, is a popularstaple at wedding parties and formal banquets, with a serving for 12 people costingaround US$138.

In HongKong districts such as Sheung Wan, which specialises in dried seafood, premiumshark fin can fetch up to US$1,280 per kilo. One Sheung Wan wholesaler recentlytold the Guardian, however, that the market price had dropped by about 20% inthe past two months, partly as a result of the campaign.

About 73million sharks are killed every year, and the appetite for their fins in placessuch as Hong Kong has taken one in three shark species to the brink of extinction.

"Byremoving shark fin from our menus, we hope that our decision can contribute topreserving the marine ecosystem for the world's future generations," thePeninsula group's chief executive, Clement Kwok, said in a statement.

"AsAsia's oldest hotel company, we also hope that our decision will inspire otherhospitality companies to do the same."

Otherluxury hotel chains have attempted to reduce shark fin consumption by offeringalternative menus for wedding banquets, sometimes with inducements such as a freenight's accommodation for the newlyweds.

The push toremove the delicacy – prized more for its glutinous texture than for its taste– has gathered momentum after a slow start, according to World Wildlife Fund,which has seen 97 caterers and hotels sign up to its alternative shark-freemenu in the past year.

A 2010survey of eating habits by Bloom Association, a marine conservation group,found that despite the dish's central place in Cantonese cuisine, attitudeswere shifting, particularly among younger people.

Accordingto Bloom, 66% of Hong Kong diners said they were uncomfortable with the idea ofeating an endangered species, and more than three-quarters said they would notmind if it was removed from banquet menus.

ThePeninsula announcement came as the European commission called for a global ban on shark finning – the practice of cutting off a shark's fin and throwing itsbody back into the sea – by EU fishermen. EU countries are responsible forabout 14% – the second-largest share – of the global shark catch.



Jumat, 18 November 2011

Fishermen Sue ConocoPhillips Over China Oil Spill

Jakarta Globe, November 18, 2011

Relatedarticles

Beijing. Agroup of Chinese fishermen is suing ConocoPhillips for damages allegedly causedby a huge oil spill at an offshore field operated by the US energy giant, theirlawyer said on Friday.

Theearly-June spill leaked more than 3,000 barrels of oil and oil-based mud — asubstance used as a lubricant in drilling — off China’s eastern coast, drawingwidespread public criticism and warnings from Chinese authorities.

The grouphas filed a civil lawsuit in a court in the eastern city of Qingdao asking the Houston-basedfirm to pay 30 million yuan ($4.7 million) to more than 200 fishermen livingthere, Yi Jiafeng told AFP.

“Inenvironmental pollution lawsuits, we follow the principle of ‘inverseresponsibility of providing proof’ — the victims detail the damage and therespondent must provide counter evidence,” he said.

ConocoPhillipswas not immediately available for comment.

Environmentalgroups and local fishermen have accused the US firm and its Chinese state-runpartner CNOOC of initially covering up the spill, which was discovered in Junebut only made public nearly a month later.

But bothfirms deny the allegations. ConocoPhillips says it cooperated with authoritiesas soon as the accident occurred in Bohai Bay in northeast China.

“Anyrelease of oil, no matter the size, is too great,” it said in a statement onits Web site.

CNOOC,meanwhile, said last month all the leaks had now been identified and sealed,the official Xinhua news agency reported.

Thefishermen involved in the lawsuit claim they lost a total of 164,000 yuaninvested in clam seedlings and 17,000 undersea cages — only 3,000 of which hadclams left alive after the spill, the official Beijing News reported.

The StateOceanic Administration — the government agency that supervises and managesChina’s seas — has also said it will sue ConocoPhillips over the leak.

But anearlier civil lawsuit connected to the spill was dismissed by a court in thenorthern port of Tianjin for lack of evidence, the Beijing News said.

Yi, whofiled the lawsuit Friday, said it would take seven days for the Qingdao courtto decide whether or not it would accept the case.

Agence France-Presse
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Kamis, 06 Oktober 2011

Ministry to build 16,000 houses for fishermen

The Jakarta Post, Thu, 10/06/2011

The PublicHousing Ministry says it will build around 16,000 affordable across thecountry, especially for fishermen.

“We willbuild around 16,000 very inexpensive houses for fishermen. The locations willbe all throughout Indonesia and will later be determined by the MaritimeAffairs and Fishery Ministry,” Public Housing Minister Suharso Monoarfa saidThursday as quoted by tribunnews.com.

He said hehoped that the houses, to be priced between Rp 6 million (US$672) and Rp 11million, would reduce the backlog of housing in the country and also improvethe prosperity of fishermen.

“Althoughthey [fishermen] go to sea for two to three weeks at a time, they have homes toreturn to. Of course we don’t want them living in uninhabitable houses. It ishoped that through this cheap housing, fishermen and their families can have abetter quality of life,” he said.

Jumat, 29 Juli 2011

Gone fishin’—piloting community supported fisheries at Google

Google Green blog, 7/29/11
(Cross-posted on the Official Google Blog)

I've always loved the ocean—I was born in Shanghai, which means "upon the sea.” And as a chef, I'm always drawn to food that claims a spirit of place. After moving to California, near Half Moon Bay, I began visiting the docks to buy seafood, and got to know the fishermen.

Over time, it became evident to me that this part of our food supply is broken: many consumers purchase stale, unsustainably-raised fish from chain grocers. Meanwhile, fishermen often sell their diminishing catch to wholesalers at a very low profit, meaning their livelihoods are no longer sustained by their catch. There’s also the environmental factor to consider: Overfishing and illegal practices cause worldwide decline in ocean wildlife populations and wreak havoc on underwater habitats—not to mention the carbon footprint of transporting seafood far from its origin.

Google’s chefs have long been committed to sourcing food for our cafes as locally, seasonally and organically as possible. And in our Mountain View headquarters, many employees cook with the same ingredients at home thanks to on-site Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) programs. When I joined the team as an executive chef in Mountain View, I wanted to make a difference in our purchasing program for seafood. For the five years leading up to then, I wrote a column for the San Francisco Chronicle called “Seafood by the Season,” and I knew it could be done. In early 2010, we began a push to apply the most rigorous standards to our seafood-buying practices, and respond to the in-the-moment fluctuations of the catch from small, independent fishermen.

Things took off from there. My colleague Quentin Topping dreamed of providing the same high-quality seafood we serve in our cafes for Googlers to take home to their families. That idea became the Google Community Supported Fishery (CSF), which we launched in May 2011. In this program, Googlers sign up to purchase a weekly supply of local, sustainable seafood, supplied through a partnership with the Half Moon Bay (HMB) Fisherman’s Association.


The Google Culinary team on a visit with fishermen in Half Moon Bay,
Calif. — Quentin and I are the second and third from the left, in black.

We tend to think on a massive scale at Google—whether it’s how to deliver instant search results around the globe or help thousands of small businesses get online—but when it comes to feeding our employees at work and at home, it really comes down to a local touch. Knowing where our seafood, meat and produce come from, as well as knowing how they’re raised, farmed or harvested, makes all the difference in the on-the-ground work of sustainability. We see many bright spots ahead for our Community Supported Agriculture and Fishery programs, such as expansion to other offices and adding a grass-fed beef and pasture-raised poultry program. It’s exciting to work someplace where we can think big and local.

We know of two CSFs in the Bay Area. The Half Moon Bay Fishermen’s Association supplies only Google at the moment, but will soon add public drop-off sites—keep posted by visiting Farmigo.com. The other is CSea out of Bodega Bay. If you live elsewhere, we hope you’ll consider stepping up to create one in your area.

And even if you don’t live near the ocean or have direct access to fresh-caught seafood, the choices you make about what fish to purchase or order in restaurants can make a real difference. You may want to consider following the guidelines that we used for our Google Green Seafood policy: Whenever possible, purchase species caught locally and in-season, by small, independent fisher-families, using environmentally-responsible methods. We think it’s important to be responsive to the fluctuations of catch too, and source from fisheries that enforce catch limits or are guided by ecosystem-based management programs. As for us, we’ll continue to research and source responsibly managed farmed seafood, and always keep transparency and Googler health at the center of our program.



Posted by Liv Wu, Executive Chef

Indonesian fishermen find body of American surfer

The Jakarta Post, Associated Press, Jakarta | Fri, 07/29/2011

Washed ashore: This May 2008 file photo provided by family friend Maurice
 Mitchell shows Daniel Bobis on his wedding day in Point Lookout, N.Y. Bobis,
 32, a math teacher and coach at Long Beach High School in New York,
 disappeared during an apparent surfing accident off the coast of western
 Indonesia on July 24, 2011. Local fishermen say they found his body about 20 miles
 (30 kilometers) from where he's last been seen.  (AP/courtesy of Maurice Mitchell,
Allison Caviness)

Localfishermen Thursday found the body of an American surfer who went missing lastweekend in waters off western Indonesia.

DanielBobis apparently hit another surfer's board after emerging from the barrel of apowerful, 10-foot (3-meter) wave. His leash broke and his board washed toshore. A member of the search and rescue team said Bobis' body was found about20 miles (32 kilometers) from where he'd last been seen.

Bobis, 32,was a math teacher and coach at Long Beach High School in New York. He had beenvacationing with his wife, Rachel, on Sumatra island. She did not wish tocomment.

Friends inLong Beach, a seaside community on Long Island, said Bobis had seeminglyboundless energy. He played drums in a band, taught karate and was anenvironmental activist. At the school, he started a competitive surf team andwas head coach.

"Everybody'smourning," said Teresa Greifenberger, 53, whose son Jonathan is on thesurf team.

Schoolstaff members were calling bereaved students to let them know counselors wereavailable, she said. Some of the surfers were planning to paddle into the surfThursday evening and observe a moment of silence, she added.

SeanPearsall, 32, called Bobis a close friend. He said the news was devastating butthere was a measure of relief that his body was found.

"He wassuch a staple in the community," he said. "There were just so manypeople whose lives he touched. He did more in 32 years than most people do in80. He definitely lived his life to the fullest and that's how he was everyday."

His friendsare planning a benefit for the family in September. Pearsall said they alreadyhad an overwhelming response from individuals and businesses eager to donateitems for a raffle.

"Heknew the power of the ocean," Pearsall said, adding that Bobis was anextremely experienced surfer and swimmer.

"Itjust goes to show you that Mother Nature calls the shots, unfortunately."

Minggu, 24 Juli 2011

Gaza fishermen: 'They will fire bullets and shoot water at me' - video

Our reporters experience first hand Israeli efforts to intimidate Gaza fishermen and keep their fishing trips ever closer to shore

guardian.co.uk, Harriet Sherwood and Mat Heywood, Sunday 24 July 2011




Jumat, 08 Juli 2011

UNDP To Finance Wakatobi International Fishery School

Antara News, Fri, July 8 2011


UNDP provides the funds of Rp100 billion for the construction of the Wakatobi International Fishery School, the first of its kind Asia....


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Kendari, SE Sulawesi (ANTARA News) - The United Nations Development Program (UNDP) will fully finance the construction of the International Fishery School (SPI) in Wakatobi, Southeast Sulawesi, a local official said.

Illustration of a Fisherman
(ANTARA PHOTO/Zabur Karuru)
Wakatobi Mmarine and Fishery Office Chief Hajiu said on Friday that Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Fadel Muhammad would lay the first corner stone next Saturday, July 16, 2011.

"UNDP provides the funds of Rp100 billion for the construction of the Wakatobi International Fishery School, the first of its kind Asia," Hajiu said.

According to him, Wakatobi district government would only provide 100-hectare plot of land for the construction of the school in two stages, financed by UNDP.

For the first stage he said the local government has prepared a 50-hectare plot of land for school which was to be inaugurated by the maritime affairs and fisheries minister.

"On the 50-hectare plot of land for the first stage, the International Fishery School will be built in addition to other facilities such as students dormitory, and Muslim and Christian houses of worship," Hajiu said.

He said both Muslim and Christian houses of worship were needed because the students and lecturers would be from various countries, especially the six countries at the world`s coral reef triangle area.

According to Hajiu, the the prospective students who wanted to study at the school would undergo tight entry test, especially related to their academic competence on coral reefs conservation.

"In principle, the students who are accepted to study at such as school will be taught and trained in such away to master the knowledge about coral reefs conservation," Hajiu said.

He said the first-corner-stone laying ceremony

would also be attended by Coordinating Minister for People`s Welfare Agung Laksono, Culture and Tourism Minister Jero Wacik, Southeast Sulawesi Governor Nur Alam, and a number of other invitees.

Jumat, 17 Juni 2011

Indonesia becomes fisheries' regional center

Antara News, Fri, June 17 2011

Jakarta  (ANTARA News) - Indonesia was asked to become the Regional Center for Inland Fisheries Development. This was stated today (June 17) by Marine and Fisheries Minister, Fadel Muhammad, after attending the Ministrial Meeting which opened by Thailand Vice Prime Minister, Trairong Suwankhiri in Bangkok, Thailand.

"This is an honor for Indonesia to be trusted by SEAFDEC (South East Asian Fisheries Development Center) countries member as a place to the sub-commision organization activities which was initiated by Japan.

According to Fadel, as one of the marine and fisheries producer countries in the world, role of Indonesia in development and construction in fisheries sector is highly valued by other countries. Another honorary for Indonesia is in this Ministrial Meeting, Indonesia is trusted to be vice chairman together with Thailand which will be a host as well as chairman for the meeting.

Fadel stated, there are other important things which agreed by Agriculture and Fisheries ASEAN Ministers together with Japan in the SEAFDEC that is Indonesia at the end of 2011 will be a host to organize the ministrial meeting to discuss Illegal, Unreported, and Unregulated (IUU) Fishing solutions which often occurs in Indonesia.

The last thing to be discussed in Bangkok meeting this time is economic partnership between ASEAN countries and food security partnership especially fish until 2020. All of SEAFDEC members are also agreed with Indonesia as a coordinator to concern with food security threatening issue.

During the SEAFDEC Ministrial Meeting, Fadel with Malaysian Agricultural Minister, Dato Seri Noh Umar held a bilateral meeting to discuss about fisherman security between two countries.

In this bilateral meeting, the solutions for those securities issues will be solved amicably for the advantage and welfare of Indonesian and Malaysian fishermen.

After the bilateral meeting, Fadel and Omar feel grateful that all fishermen security issues which has happened can be solved. Today, Fadel and Omar are also agreed to prioritize fishermen welfare and security when fishing.

For further information, please contact Dr.Yulistyo Mudho, M.Sc, Head of Data, Statistics and Information Center, The Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries (Mobile 0811836967).

Editor: Jafar M Sidik

Senin, 30 Mei 2011

RI, Malaysia agree to protect traditional fishermen

Antara News, Mon, May 30 2011

Batam, Riau Islands (ANTARA News) - Indonesia and Malaysia have agreed to protect their traditional fishermen who have been carried away by sea currents into each other`s territorial waters.

Traditional fisherman at Teluk Nibung,
Padang, West Sumatra. (ANTARA/Iggoy el Fitra)
"In case traditional fishermen cross their countries` sea border unknowingly or by the forces of nature, they will not be captured but ordered to return," Indonesian Fisheries and Marine Resources Minister Fadel Muhammad said here on Monday.

The two countries also agreed to help traditional fishing boats that had gone astray to return to their countries` waters and not to capture or punish them.

Fadel said traditional fishermen never deliberately crossed the border, adding they crossed the border because they had been carried away by sea currents and not because they wanted to fish illegally in another country`s waters.

He said fishermen operating on boats weighing five to 10 GT as traditional boats would be categorized as traditional fishermen.

He said if ships that cross the border are big ships efforts would be made to capture them.

"Boats may be captured if they are big," he said.

The minister said a lot of foreign ships have been poaching fish in the Riau Islands waters so far, mostly from China, Vietnam and Thailand.

Editor: Priyambodo RH

Selasa, 03 Mei 2011

55 Feet Long Unknown Fish Species Found in China


According to a local newspaper, the big fish weighs at least 10,000 pounds.

A 55 feet long fish has been found in the seashore of Guangdong, China.

Hwang, a 66-years-old fisherman living in the near area, said he has never seen anything like this in his whole life and that the fish was tied with ropes when it was first found.

Many people have flocked to see this strange specimen since its discovery, although its rotting corpse already emits a foul smell.

The people living in the area think the fish was caught by some fisherman but was abandoned due to its heavy weight, hence the ropes.

Due to the serious decay of the fish's body, it is almost impossible to identify the species, according to the local newspaper.

The fish was discovered on April 25th.

Sabtu, 09 April 2011

Police yet to summon blast fishing victim

Antara News, Sat, April 9 2011

Sumenep, E Java (ANTARA News) - Sumenep district police investigators have yet to summon the victim of blast fishing in Kandibas hamlet, Guluk-Guluk village on April 6, a policeman said.

The victim, Muhlis, was still under the intensive care of Moh.Anwar general hospital`s doctors due to his serious injuries, Sumenep police spokesman, Commissioner Edy Purwanto said.

Speaking to newsmen here Saturday, he said Muhlis` serious wounds had forced him to remain at the hospital so that the police investigators could not yet summon him for questioning.

Muhlis was suspected of possessing the home-made bomb frequently used for poaching, he said.

The police did not only find the home-made bomb materials but also a home-made gun and bullets in his house. "We want to know where he get all stuffs," he said.

Edy Purwanto said a number of policemen were deployed to the hospital to secure him and monitor his health condition.

The home-made bomb exploded inside Muhlis` house on Wednesday at 05.30 am local time, damaging the house and injuring him.

Blast fishing activity in various parts of Indonesia, including East Java Province, can still be found. This condition has attracted world attention.

Endowed by nature with more than 50,000 square kilometers of coral reefs, Indonesia has been listed by the United Nations as a nation with the largest coral reef resources in the world, along with Australia and the Philippines.

According to the United Nations Environment Program World Conservation Monitoring Center (UNEP-WCMC)`s World Atlas of Coral Reefs (2001), Indonesia had 51,020 square kilometers of coral reefs or 17.95 percent of the world`s coral reefs.

This archipelagic nation topped the list , followed by Australia with 48,460 square kilometers, the Philippines (25,060), France (14,280), Papua New Guinea (13,840), Fiji (10,020), Maldives (8,920), Saudi Arabia (6,660), Marshall Islands (6,110) and India (5,790).

The benefits that Indonesia can get from its coral reefs are obvious because coral reefs are evidently the sources of food and income for a lot of people from fisheries and tourism and also sources of raw materials for medicines.

But the UNEC-WCMC has warned that activities, such as fishing using explosives, are seriously degrading coral reefs in various parts of the world, including in Indonesia.

The UN body`s warning is based on factual information collected over the years. Blast fishing itself has been practiced in Indonesia since World War II.

Editor: Jafar M Sidik

Rabu, 06 April 2011

Fishermen: Utility's actions in Japan nuclear crisis 'unforgivable'

CNN News, By the CNN Wire Staff, April 6, 2011


Fishmongers check bluefin tuna before an auction at the
fishmarket in Shiogama, Miyagi prefecture on Monday, April 4.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Merchants at the world's largest fish market estimate an 80% drop in sales
  • Members of Japan's fishery association met Wednesday with Tokyo Electric officials
  • The group cites "rage" among fishermen for what it called "irresponsible behavior"
  • A Japanese official says fishermen will get money for suffering due to the nuclear crisis


Tokyo (CNN) -- Japanese fishermen have taken the offensive in their fight against the owner of the stricken Fukushima Daiichi power plant, angrily calling the utility's actions insulting, incompetent and "unforgivable" over the course of the weeks-long nuclear crisis.

The National Fishery Corporative Joint Association, a trade group for Japan's fishing industry, issued a scathing statement Wednesday just hours after its members met with officials from the Tokyo Electric Power Company, which runs the crippled plant.

In it, the group demanded that the utility and the Japanese government "compensate all parties (that have) indirectly or directly suffered" as a result of the situation.

"Tokyo Electric has not been capable of understanding the damage at the plant and (contaminated) water. That led to this serious situation," the group said in the statement.

"Tokyo Electric and the government (share) responsibility for this situation. It is unforgivable," the message continues. "All those who are living and sustaining their lives on the sea are feeling strong rage against (the utility and the government's) irresponsible behavior."

Members of the fishing group said they are particularly angry about the decision made and enacted Monday to dump tons of radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean. This happened just hours after the group specifically requested it not be done -- leaving its members feeling ignored.

Yoshiaki Saito, who has sold fish for 40 years at Tokyo's Tsukiji Market, told CNN how angry he is at Tokyo Electric. "If we put poison in the river, we'd be arrested," he said. "But TEPCO won't be treated like that. It's unfair."

He's also angry at what he called the "stupid government."

Fishery association representatives Wednesday also blasted Tokyo Electric's claim that nuclear power plants were safe and that such accidents would never happen.

An official from the utility company said Tokyo Electric officials offered apologies and vowed to improve the situation. This was shortly after they confirmed, early Wednesday, that one leak outside the No. 2 reactor, through which water that had radiation levels millions of times the legal limit, was no longer rushing into the sea.

The fishing industry demanded an end to all leaks of contaminated water into the sea "to prevent the death of the fishing industry."

"We demand that Tokyo Electric and the government react to all the problems provoked by this outrageous decision (to dump radioactive water in the sea) and flush out highly contaminated water" now in the ocean, the association said in its statement.

Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano on Wednesday apologized for how the government had communicated why the dump of the radioactive water from the plant was necessary.

He explained that it contained 1/200,000ths the level of radiation as that in and around the No. 2 reactor, one of six at the nuclear plant, and that authorities decided to clear out the less radioactive liquid in order to make room in a waste water treatment facility.

"So it was a measure to prevent more serious marine contamination," the Japanese official said. "But we needed to explain the reasoning better to the people (impacted by it)."

Whatever the radiation level, Timothy Jorgensen, chair of the radiation safety committee at Georgetown University Medical Center, explained that this dumped water should quickly dilute considering it is equivalent to dumping five swimming pools worth of water into a Pacific Ocean that has roughly "300 trillion swimming pools full of water."

Still, Japanese authorities have noted higher-than-normal radiation levels in some young eels. And in addition to its impact on aquatic life directly, some fear the mere possibility of radiation in seafood may deter consumers domestically and abroad from eating products that originated in waters off Japan.

Citing such "rumors," Edano said Tuesday that authorities will step up the monitoring of radiation in seafood, partly in a bid to assure the public that whatever gets on the market is safe.

The new Japanese government standards will rely upon enforcement by city and town health inspectors, not those with the prefectures, according to Edano. As with milk and vegetables, certain fish can be removed from the restricted list if levels of radiation come in below the legal limits for three weeks in a row.

As to the fishermen themselves, the Cabinet official said Wednesday that, in addition to a larger compensation package to be decided upon later, the government is considering a preemptive payout.

Merchants at the world's largest fish market, Tsukiji Market in Tokyo, told CNN they have seen an 80% drop in sales.

Similar payments will likely go to farmers, who have been explicitly affected by the nuclear crisis much longer than those in the fishing industry.

Japan first imposed restrictions on the sale and distribution of milk and certain vegetables, like spinach, on March 20 -- more than two weeks before Edano announced Tuesday that radiation levels would similarly be regulated in seafood.

One scientist, whose institute will start conducting research next month tracking radiation off Japan, said it's likely that such levels in fish will increase for six months -- as the contamination gets in the food supply -- then gradually go down over two or more years.

Still, given the standards now being set, he thinks people should feel comfortable eating seafood from Japan.

"The current regulations are quite reasonable," said Jin Misonou, a research fellow for the Tokyo-based Marine Ecology Research Institute. "So, of course, please eat fish. It is good to revive the fishing industry."

CNN's Kyung Lah and journalists Hiroo Saso and Gen Shimada contributed to this report.


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Selasa, 15 Maret 2011

Forty percent of coral reefs in Gorontalo waters damaged

Antara News, Tue, March 15 2011

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Gorontalo, Northen Sulawesi (ANTARA News) - About 40 percent of coral reefs in the Gulf of Tomini in Gorontalo province waters is believed to have been damaged by blast fishing, a local environmental affairs official said.

Rugaya Biuki, head of the environmental management section at Gorontalo province`s environment office, said here Tuesday , the damage had mainly occurred to coral reefs in coastal areas, adjacent to the mainland.

Generally, the value of coral reef covers spread along the coast and local islands, had begun to shrink and become eroded due to human activities.

"Coral reefs at some islands such as in Asiangi, Lamua Daa, Raja and Popaya islands, still have relatively good covers which range from 50 to 80 percent," Rugaya said.

Coral reefs in the Gulf of Tomini, especially in Gorontalo province. consist of two types, namely ring coral reefs (atoll) and edge coral reef (fringing reef).

Coral reefs function as a protective coastal ecosystems to arrest and break up the energy of sea waves and thus prevents abrasion and damage to the coastal environment.

In addition, coral reefs also serve as home to many kinds of marine biota.

Editor: Priyambodo RH

Minggu, 13 Maret 2011

Four Indonesians Feared Dead in Japan Disaster

Jakarta Globe, Dessy Sagita, March 13, 2011


Black smoke rising from an industrial complex in Shiogama, Miyagi prefecture,
northern Japan, on Sunday, two days after a powerful earthquake and tsunami
hit the the country's northeastern coast. Four Indonesian fishermen aboard a
tuna boat in the port city when the tsunami struck are missing feared dead.
(AP Photo/Kyodo News)

Related articles

Four Indonesian fishermen have been confirmed as being among the missing in the aftermath of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami disaster.

Indonesian Foreign Affairs Minister Marty Natalegawa, speaking during a news conference on Sunday, identified said the men ranged in age from 27 to 31 years.

Marty said the men had been aboard a tuna boat anchored in the port city of Shiogama in Miyagi prefecture when the tsunami struck.

The boat had been located 2.5 kilometers from shore but rescue personnel had found no trace of the crew, he said.


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