Archive for the ‘Marine’ Category

Dec
20
    
Saving The Whales
Posted (Cassie) on 20-12-2007

Last month Japan set out on its biggest whale hunt yet, with more than 1,000 whales targeted for slaughter – all in the name of science.  Japan’s whaling in the southern ocean will see up to 935 minke whales, 50 endangered fin whales and 50 humpback whales killed. 

In this article from The Age, Australia plans to strengthen its efforts to stop Japanese whaling, and will be sending ships and aircraft to monitor the whalers and collect evidence in their fight against whaling.

New Zealander solo yachtsman David Taylor will also join the fight against Japanese whaling by setting sail in his homemade boat, along with New Zealand’s Greenpeace, to make a stand against the Japanese and voice his disgust for whaling. 

“I’m against whaling in total, but the humpback whales, they’re just such a magnificent animal,” says Taylor.  “I just feel it’s something I have to do, I’ve got no option.”

Sometimes I wonder what the world will be like in 100 years – how many more species will be extinct, how much will we have ravaged mother earth and will it be just a deathly shadow of what once was?  A melodramatic thought or not, but I bet our great-grandparents never envisioned what is today.  Once the whales have been and gone, what will we exterminate next?  Not to get on my soap box and cry wolf or anything, but really, how simple and obvious is the concept to look after what we’ve got?  Hope you get through to them boys… safe sailing

Nov
09
    
Shipping Pollution Dangerous To Health
Posted (Cassie) on 09-11-2007

Not too many people catch a ship to work or sit in a congested shipping lane during peak hour, sucking in all the fumes through their air conditioning. So when most people think of fuel fumes, they think of all pollution oozing out of the millions of cars, trucks and buses on the roads.

An Associated Press article reported that a study in the American Chemical Society found that in 2002, almost 60,000 people who lived in coastal areas along the world’s major shipping routes died from heart and lung complications due to the high sulfate emissions from ships. The report also concludes that the death toll could rise up to 82,000 by the year 2012.

“Ship pollution affects the health of communities in coastal and inland regions around the world, yet pollution from ships remain one of the least regulated parts of our global transportation system,” said Dr. James Corbett who is a co-author of the report.

“There are a lot of observations made from data to suggest a very strong association between sulfur, air pollution, including marine pollution, and premature deaths from respiratory problems like chronic lung failure,” T.W. Wong professor of medicine at the Chinese University of Hong Kong told the AP.

“If ships switched to cleaner fuels, it would help save lives,” he said.

This is not really surprising, you don’t need binoculars to see the fumes that billow out of the ships, and even if your eyesight isn’t up to par, you can most certainly smell it. And I’m not talking about one of the major shipping ports in Asia either.

I love the beach, sand under my feet, the sea breeze blowing through my hair… what doesn’t go with this scenario is one of those pollution masks. Diesel ships burn some of the dirtiest fuel in existence, but there is an answer to cleaning up the fuel… check out the following link Green Plus.