Greenpeace activists target trawlers
The environmental group Greenpeace has boarded three shrimp trawlers in the north-west Atlantic to investigate the environmental damage done by bottom trawling, a Greenpeace spokesperson said on Tuesday.
Working from the Greenpeace ship Esperanza, the activists surveyed the trawler's activities on the high seas near the Flemish Cap off the coast of Canada's Newfoundland, said Iris Menn by telephone from the ship.
"We boarded three of the six ships fishing in the area," she said, noting that the vessels freely gave them access to board.
Greenpeace is currently campaigning against the practise of bottom trawling, which involves dragging weighted underwater nets up to 100 metres wide along the sea floor, damaging everything in their paths.
The practise is common in the rich fishing waters of the north-west Atlantic, where it can destroy cold water coral and sponge habitats, the group says.
"This is a biodiversity hot spot," said Menn.
"The problem is that the ships destroy the bottoms and might destroy the corals at the same time," she said.
Last week Greenpeace accused the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organisation of negligence in protecting the marine ecosystems off Newfoundland and urged the United Nations to set a moratorium on high seas bottom trawling.
After 25 years in operation, Greenpeace said, NAFO "has failed to protect marine stocks and in so doing has allowed the destruction of the rich marine ecosystems that have thrived here for thousands of years."
Source: www.iol.co.za
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