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Socialist Action
/ July
1998
Profits Vs. The Planet
Race for Profits is destroying
oceans
by Roland Sheppard
Last month, President Clinton spoke at the National
Oceans Conference held in Monterey, Calif. Although Clinton
did a lot of posturing about the growing crisis in the
world's oceans, he did not clearly address the nature and
extent of the crisis.
I recently read a paper titled "State of the Oceans1996,"
by John Englander, Chairman, Ocean Futures,
www.oceanfutures.org. The article is an impassioned plea
alerting us to the plight of the oceans and the need for a
more rational approach in order to save the oceans and the
environment for humanity's survival.
Englander points out that the oceans are necessary to all
of us as a natural resource.
- They are a direct source of food.
- They are essential for consuming carbon dioxide and
producing approximately 1/2 of the earth's oxygen.
- They have a great bearing on climate.
- They cover 73 percent of the surface of the earth and
constitute over 99 percent of the habitat that sustains
life.
- They are a global ecosystem.
Englander categorizes four factors that can cause major
damage to the ocean ecosystem:
- Overfishing
- Pollution
- Habitat damage
- Global & climatic forces
In the March 1998 issue of Socialist Action, I wrote
about the decline of the world's fisheries and their
possible destruction.
According to the Englander article, the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization estimates that all 17 of the
world's major fishing areas have either reached or exceeded
their natural limits, and that nine are in serious decline.
Forty percent of valuable U.S. fish stocks are depleted; 43
percent are fished to maximum sustainable levels.
I also wrote about fleets of industrial supertrawlers
(the size of a football field) that pull nylon nets
thousands of feet long through the water, capturing
everything in their path -- 400 tons of fish at a single
netting. These super-trawlers stay off-shore for months at a
time, processing and freezing their catch as they go, thus
giving them a major advantage over smaller land- based
boats.
According to the Englander article, every year in the
United States, these methods produce10 million tons of
unwanted, non-targeted fish, which are discarded. (Twice the
catch of all commercial and recreational fishing.)
While fish are being depleted, their habitat (spawning
grounds) are being destroyed by human invasion and
pollution. On this question, Englander makes the following
points:
The problem of oceanic pollution largely starts in the
major estuaries, with chemicals and nutrients, largely
agricultural runoff, causing eutrophication (a situation
where the water is so rich in nutrients, that the algae
"chokes" the ecosystem and extinguishes most life forms).
The decaying algae in the Mississippi River, for example,
has created a 4000 square mile "dead zone" off the coasts of
Louisiana and Texas. In this area, the shellfish have been
killed and the fish displaced from the otherwise rich
environment of the Gulf of Mexico.
While oil spills grab the headlines, they account for
only 5 percent of the marine oil pollution.
The majority of the contamination comes from automobile
related sources, through the sewage system and as runoff.
Each American urban area of 5 million people creates
approximately 11 million gallons of oil pollution each year,
about the same as the spillage from the Exxon Valdez tanker
off Alaska.
Sources of pollution include cars, power plants, and
industry. In the developing world, 1.7 billion people do not
have sewage disposal systems.
Air pollution accounts for approximately one third of the
toxic substances that enter the ocean. While this figure
might be a surprise to most people, it simply follows the
fact that air pollution is widely dispersed and the major
surface area of the planet is the sea.
Reduced fish yield is closely related to habitat
destruction as well as coastal pollution. Ninety percent of
the marine catch comes from coastal areas. Wetlands and
estuaries are the nurseries for many fish species. We are
destroying them on a large scale.
Of the original 220 million acres of wetlands in the
lower 48 states, over 50 percent have been lost during the
last 200 years. San Francisco Bay, the largest estuary in
the Western United States, has lost 60 percent of its water
area to land reclamation.
Half the world's population lives within 100 km of a
coastline. The population increasingly tends to live on the
coast, increasing pressure on sewage systems, and filling in
wetlands.
This reminds me of the "robber barons," who made their
original fortunes by raping and pillaging this country's
environment during the late 1800s. At that time, it was
still possible to enforce local and national laws to contain
them.
But today's "robber barons" are not fettered by national
boundries or laws. The basis for the problem is that the
oceans are international.
In the world-wide drive for profits, the environment is
being destroyed. Especially with the collapse of the Soviet
and Asian economies, it is not profitable, in the context of
world and national capitalist competition, to change the
present process and to build an economic infrastructure that
will divert capital to protect the environment.
At this stage in world history, capitalism can not afford
to protect the environment. Yet humanity cannot afford its
destruction. We need to begin reversing the damage to the
ocean before it is too late.
To quote Rachael Carson from her book, "The Sea Around
Us":
"It is a curious situation that the sea, from which life
first arose, should now be threatened by the activities of
one form of that life. But the sea, though changed in a
sinister way, will continue to exist; the threat is rather
to life itself."
Englander appeals to all to begin to defend the oceans.
He concludes with a quote from anthropologist Margaret Mead:
"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed
citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing
that ever has."
If we continue to organize against capitalism and its
destructive momentum, we can change the world.
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