U.N. Warns About Ocean 'Dead Zones'  

Discussion in 'Environmental' started by Matt Rogers, Mar 29, 2004.

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  1. Matt Rogers

    Matt Rogers Kingfish

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    This sucks, always heard about them in the Gulf of Mexico, but didn't realize it was world wide. Should have known. :p

    U.N. Warns About Ocean 'Dead Zones'
    Mon Mar 29, 8:21 AM ET Add Science - AP to My Yahoo!

    http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=sto...ap_on_sc/un_environment_forum_1&printer=1

    By HANS GREIMEL, Associated Press Writer

    JEJU, South Korea - So-called "dead zones," oxygen-starved areas of the world's oceans that are devoid of fish, top the list of emerging environmental challenges, the United Nations (news - web sites) Environment Program warned Monday in its global overview.



    The spreading zones have doubled over the last decade and pose as big a threat to fish stocks as overfishing, UNEP said its Global Environment Outlook Year Book 2003, released at the opening of the agency's 8th summit for the world's environment ministers.


    The new findings tally nearly 150 dead zones around the globe, double the number in 1990, with some stretching 27,000 square miles.


    Dead zones have long afflicted the Gulf of Mexico and Chesapeake Bay, but are now spreading to other bodies of water, such as the Baltic Sea, Black Sea, Adriatic Sea, Gulf of Thailand and Yellow Sea, as other regions develop, UNEP said.


    They are also appearing off South America, Japan, Australia and New Zealand.


    The main cause is excess nitrogen run-off from farm fertilizers, sewage and industrial pollutants. The nitrogen triggers blooms of microscopic algae known as phytoplankton. As the algae die and rot, they consume oxygen, thereby suffocating everything from clams and lobsters to oysters and fish.


    "Human kind is engaged in a gigantic, global, experiment as a result of inefficient and often overuse of fertilizers, the discharge of untreated sewage and the ever rising emissions from vehicles and factories," UNEP Executive Director Klaus Toepfer said in a statement.


    "Unless urgent action is taken to tackle the sources of the problem, it is likely to escalate rapidly," Toepfer said.


    UNEP urged nations to cooperate in reducing the amount of nitrogen discharged into their coastal waters, in part by cutting back on fertilizer use or planting more forests and grasslands along feeder rivers to soak up the excess nitrogen.


    The announcement comes as environment ministers from more than 150 nations gathered on the South Korean resort island of Jeju at UNEP's 8th Special Session of the Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum.


    Increasingly frequent dust and sand storms and impending global water shortages will also headline the three-day summit.


    UNEP warns that without concerted effort to improve access to safe drinking water, a third of the world's population is likely to suffer chronic water shortages within a few decades. About 1.1 billion people lacked access to safe drinking water in 2000, while another 2.4 billion lacked access to basic sanitation, UNEP said.


    The growing frequency of dust and sand storms is another concern, especially storms caused by land degradation and desertification in Mongolia and northern China.


    Scientists have recently linked similar storms, originating in the Sahara, with damage to coral reefs in the Caribbean, UNEP said.


    Discussions in Jeju will form a basis for deliberations at the 12th meeting of the U.N. Commission on Sustainable Development to be held in New York next month.


    That meeting will assess progress toward United Nations targets of halving the proportion of people with no access to safe drinking water or basic sanitation by 2015.
     
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  3. omard

    omard Gnarly Old Codfish

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    Re: U.N. Warns About Ocean 'Dead Zones'  

    More bad new... :'(
     
  4. omard

    omard Gnarly Old Codfish

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    Re: U.N. Warns About Ocean 'Dead Zones'  

    :-[ Whoops msg got away from me...

    More bad news... :'(
     
  5. Matt Rogers

    Matt Rogers Kingfish

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    Re: U.N. Warns About Ocean 'Dead Zones'  

    Yep.

    This fertilizer runoff and other non-point pollution (ie - when it rains and the oils on the road go down the drains and into nearby streams and waterways) is a huge problem.

    That is why the Gulf of Mexico is so bad because this happens all the way down the Mississippi River and then it spills out into the Gulf. [smiley=worried.gif]
     
  6. omard

    omard Gnarly Old Codfish

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    Re: U.N. Warns About Ocean 'Dead Zones'  

    Our own, once thriving with "life", Hood Canal is now nearly a stagnant body of water...

    Started by letting in some bottom trawlers a few years ago - finished off now by hoards of waterfront residents using weed-be-gone, roundup, etc,

    Was teaming with life when young - close my eyes when I pass it now...

    :'(
     
  7. karlas

    karlas Fire Goby

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    Re: U.N. Warns About Ocean 'Dead Zones'  

    sad so sad :'(