Sunday, 31 May 2009

Trawling the seas for catastrophe

30 May 2009, ST, By Nirmal Ghosh, Thailand Correspondent

Marine world faces collapse due to unbridled and destructive fishing

Fishermen unloading a tuna catch at Bali's Jimbaran fishing village. Overfishing and abuse of the marine ecosystem are adversely affecting a vast region in South-east Asia known as the Coral Triangle. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE 

BANGKOK: - In the humid tropical dawn, the boats begin to arrive, unloading their plastic baskets of fish, shrimp, squid and crabs.
Wiry tattooed men sort them, working among slabs of gleaming ice. Many of the fish are still flipping about; the crabs are tightly bound with plastic string. They have been caught by the fishermen - or have come from trawlers lying offshore. 

Steel hooks are used to drag the baskets up to the Mahachai market, where they join fat prawns from farms along the coast. Much of the landed catch is bought by seafood processors and restaurant owners; Mahachai feeds Thailand's seafood industry and the voracious Bangkok market. Thailand is the world's largest producer of canned seafood.

Sitting on his boat after unloading two baskets of fish, squid and shrimp - the product of two whole days at sea - 46-year-old father of four Sayan Taengpoo, a fisherman for more than 20 years, says industrial development in the region has worsened water quality, and catches are down from 10 years ago.

An increase in market prices of seafood had been offset by higher increases in the cost of fuel and maintenance. It all combined to make his job harder, he said.

Mr Viroj Limsnit, managing director of major exporter Narong Seafood, whose office is near the market, said the catch has been declining.

'The simple reason is overcatching in the past and lack of control over natural resources in Thai waters,' he said.

The relatively shallow Gulf of Thailand is one of the most heavily fished seas in the world. Thai fishermen have, over the last 15 years, had to venture to Oman, India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Indonesia and Vietnam under fishing rights licences.

'Fees keep on increasing, and implementation of strict rules and regulation makes our foreign fishing more difficult,' said Mr Viroj. 'In 2007, Indonesia stopped issuing fishing licences to foreign vessels.'

The problem cuts across the region - and indeed the world. Across the planet's seas, mechanised fishing vessels are now estimated to number about 2.1 million, the nationality of many thousands of them listed by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) as 'unknown'.

Industrial-scale trawlers have devastated the seas, severely affecting the livelihood of tens of millions of local small-scale fishermen.

In parts of the Philippines whose seas have been overfished by both Filipinos and foreigners, these fishermen bring in a paltry 3,000 pesos (S$92) a month.

Across the world, trawlers are chasing fewer and fewer fish. And as the large in-demand marketable fish disappear, sea creatures lower down the food chain initially thrive because of fewer predators.

But long lines and nets, often hauled by several ships, rake the seabed indiscriminately, scooping up every living creature.

For every kilo that reaches markets like Thailand's Mahachai, more than 10kg - and sometimes up to 100kg - has been thrown away as unmarketable 'bycatch'.

'The sea bottom has probably suffered considerable damage, made even worse by the disposal of large quantities of unwanted catch,' a recently released report on Indonesia's Arafura sea noted.

Shallow tropical waters suffer from the twin pressures of a large and growing population of local fishermen, and industrial-scale fishing, much of it unregulated.

Indonesia loses an estimated US$2 billion (S$3 billion) a year to illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing.

The most recent State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture report of the FAO estimates that over half a billion people are involved in the fishing and aquaculture industries, mostly in Asia.

Worldwide, fish provides around 15 per cent of average per capita animal protein intake. In many small developing nations as well as in Bangladesh, Cambodia, Equatorial Guinea, French Guiana, the Gambia, Ghana, Sierra Leone and Indonesia, it is as high as 50 per cent.

But scientific studies have determined that the marine environment is in a state of collapse. If immediate measures are not taken, within about 50 years - the lifetime of today's children and teenagers - the seafood spreads we are used to will be reduced to a few artificially farmed species and lots of jellyfish.

In 2006, Dr Sylvia Earle, who this month won the coveted Rachel Carson award honouring pioneering conservationists, warned of an unfolding 'conservation tragedy of epic proportions'.

'We have turned to the deep oceans in our increasingly relentless and destructive pursuit of the dwindling supply of seafood,' she wrote.

In February this year, she said: 'In 50 years, we have eaten more than 90 per cent of the big fish in the sea. Nearly half of the coral reefs have disappeared.

European seas are worse off than those in Asia. And just as Taiwanese, Japanese and Chinese trawlers plunder the open ocean as their own seas lie empty, Europe has been exporting the destruction of bottom-trawling fishing to African waters.

Stockholm-based Isabella Loevin, author of the book Silent Sea - who is running for election to the European Parliament next month under the Green Party banner, told The Straits Times on the phone: 'Twenty per cent of the European Union's subsidies for fishermen goes to buying fishing rights in Third World countries, for instance in Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mauritania and Senegal.

'We used to have a fisheries agreement with Senegal up to 2006, and stopped because the waters were overfished, there was no fish left to catch.

'The root of the fisheries agreements is the fact that we have been overfishing our own waters for decades. At the same time, you have a growing appetite for fish in Europe. Now, one quarter of the fish that comes to Europe, comes from these agreements.

'There is legal fishing, but who knows how many are fishing illegally, because these countries have no capacity in terms of coast guard or surveillance.'

Bangkok-based coastal ecologist Gaya Sriskanthan said: 'It's all down to governments, enforcement and political will; we need some sort of rigorous global fisheries mechanism.'

It is not just an overfishing catastrophe. The oceans are littered with discarded nets and garbage; in one place in the Pacific floats a mass of plastic waste 10m deep and larger than France.

Pollution and global warming are acidifying the sea, killing corals. And as the fish die out, the seafood industry, in an increasingly vicious circle, turns to the coast to cultivate prawns - in the process destroying mangroves which, together with coral reefs, are among the most productive ecosystems on Earth.

'Our fate and (that of) the ocean, are one,' said Dr Earle.

'Nothing else will matter if we fail to protect the ocean. For the children of today, for tomorrow's child, as never again, now is the time.'

nirmal@sph.com.sg


Remember what we learnt under 'development' about how overfishing is a cause of concern for the world. Some questions to guide you in your reading.

1. What are some of the main reasons for dwindling fish supply as stated by the article?

2. What is the meaning of 'by-catch'?

3. What are some of the measures taken to curb over-fishing? To what extent are they effective?


Friday, 29 May 2009

Figures for Natural Vegetation Holiday Assignment

Dear 5N1 & 5N2,

Use the following figures for Question 13 (b)of your 'Natural Vegetation' holiday assignment. The pictures should be in colour. I can't find the original photographs, so I'm replacing them with the photographs below.

Photograph A,
showing characterisitics of tropical rainforest



Photograph B,
showing characterisitcs of coniferous forest

Tuesday, 26 May 2009

Figures for 'O' level 2008 Question 4

4EA, 4EB, 5N1 and 5N2,

These are the coloured maps for your 2008 'O' level questions. You can refer to these figures to do your holiday assignment.





Friday, 22 May 2009

Hunger Crossword Puzzle

4EA and 4EB,
please go to the website on World Food Programme to do your crossword puzzle. Click the sub-headings of "What is hunger", "Who are hungry", "What causes hunger" and "What is malnutrition" to read and find the answers. Do the inference questions for the two cartoons too.

Thursday, 21 May 2009

Singapore in an Uncertain World

ST, 19 May 2009

President S R Nathan laid out the priorities and focus of the Government in his speech to Parliament last night. He named the following challenges ahead. I'll print the article for you to read and we'll discuss about these challenges and how they will affect you and me.






Evolving Political System










1st Class Home











Ensuring Security and Enlarging External Space











Upgrading Education System










Strengthening Country's Social Cohesion












Enhancing Singapore's Economic Competitiveness






Terror reign over, declares Sri Lanka



A photograph released by the Sri Lankan military yesterday showing the body of Prabhakaran, still dressed in camouflage uniform, with his eyes open and the back of his head covered with a blue towel, probably to conceal a gaping bullet exit wound. -- PHOTO: REUTERS

Sri Lanka's government has declared victory in one of Asia's longest-running wars after killing the Tamil Tiger supremo, but it faces fury from a Tamil diaspora which had wide sympathy for the rebels. -- PHOTO: AP 

This photo released by the Sri Lankan military shows civilians fleeing from the 'No Fire Zone' still held by the Tiger rebels. -- PHOTO: REUTERS 

This handout picture from the Sri Lankan Defence Ministry released on May 17, 2009, is said to be of troops on May 16 after capturing the last patch of coastline in the Mullaittivu district held by the Tamil Tigers, leaving the rebels completely surrounded and cut off from any sea escape. -- PHOTO: AFP 

The rebels, who once controlled a wide swath of the north, have been routed by government forces in recent months. -- PHOTO: AFP

Sri Lankan troops near Prabhakaran's location, in a photo released by the military yesterday. The army says the rebel chief and his deputies were killed as they tried to flee. -- PHOTOS: REUTERS

Boys in Colombo waving their national flag as Sri Lanka yesterday celebrated the government's victory in a 25-year civil war against pro-Tamil insurgents. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Tuesday, 19 May 2009

Reflection on file checking

Dear students,

I've done the first round of file checking and these are my feedback. Generally the file is well-kept except for a handful of you. The worksheets and assignments are very important for revision. You need to keep them in order so that any time when you want to revise, they are there. Please remember they are not just your worksheet but mine too. I spent time marking and writing remarks, it cannot be just for one time viewing.

There are lots of learning points from the file checking. It tells me who are those who are organised and take pride in their work. The files tell me about your character, your attitude towards learning and your commitment towards wanting to achieve. For some of the students, I'm very satisfied with you file, while others... sigh.

I'm returning the files soon. For those who have imcomplete items, please find these missing pieces and file them in. For those who owe me the work, get them completed and show me. Remember our target, we must work steadily towards it. It starts from your file!

Friday, 8 May 2009

Singapore's green trump card

Making Republic a 'First World oasis' helped woo investors, says MM Lee

By Clarissa Oon, Senior Political Correspondent

MM Lee (right) explained why the greening of Singapore was a top priority after independence, during a dialogue yesterday moderated by Ambassador-at-large Tommy Koh. The open conversation and dinner marking the 150th anniversary of the Botanic Gardens raised $550,000, which will go towards scholarships for budding botanists and horticulturalists. -- ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE

SPRUCING up and greening Singapore with trees all over the island was a key economic strategy from Day One, Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew said last night.

In order to differentiate the country from its larger neighbours, one of his first tasks on becoming Prime Minister was to develop a Garden City with good infrastructure and telecommunications.

To woo investors from developed countries, 'we had to make this a First World oasis in a Third World region', he told some 600 guests from the public and private sectors, non-governmental organisations and the landscape and horticulture industry at a dinner marking the Botanic Gardens' 150th anniversary.

MM Lee took part in a dialogue at the event on the greening of Singapore, moderated by Ambassador-at-Large Tommy Koh.

Professor Koh asked him at the start of the hour-long dialogue why cleaning up 'dirty and smelly' Singapore was a priority when it faced numerous other challenges upon gaining independence in 1965.

'It was part of a bigger plan. After we were asked to leave Malaya, we had to work out a strategy which would allow a little island dependent on Malaya for its hinterland to survive,' MM Lee said.

What could be done immediately was 'to show investors that this was a well-organised place', he said of what was effectively Singapore's secret weapon.

Coming from the airport into town, they would pass by lush greenery, and when they visited him in the Istana, they would see well-maintained lawns and shrubs.

'So without having to tell anything to the chief executive officer, I knew he would understand that when I say we will deliver, he knows we can deliver; that this is a country where the administration works, where there is a system,' he said.

The fact is, he added with a laugh, 'you can't just plant a tree and walk away. The tree will die'.

'You need tree doctors, you need to understand what soil and how much sunlight it requires. You put it under a flyover and you got to get forest shrubs that grow in shaded areas,' he explained.

'It's a very complex thing that all people who run big organisations will understand,' said the man who personally oversaw the greening process here.

He credited the British colonial administration for having 'done the basics' which Singapore's landscape architects and park managers were able to build on.

Indeed, it was under British rule that the Botanic Gardens first started life in 1859, as a venue for flower shows and later where rubber was first cultivated.

Today it is one of Singapore's top tourist attractions and a premier institution for botanical research, said National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan at last night's event.

The dinner and dialogue with MM Lee raised $550,000 which will go towards scholarships for Singapore's future botanists and horticulturalists.

Guests last night also paid tribute to MM Lee's role in greening Singapore. Prof Koh said former National Parks chief executive Tan Wee Kiat, who was at the dinner, told him that he must have been 'the only gardener in the world who reports directly to the PM'.

MM Lee stressed that planting and maintaining trees and parks was 'the easy part'.

The tough part, once all the infrastructure was in place, was 'to get people to change from Third World to First World behaviour'.

This led to 'endless campaigns' to tell people 'not to bring chickens and pigs into high-rise (buildings), not to pee in elevators' and above all, he joked, 'not to steal the plants'.

It took 30 or 40 years, but finally Singapore has reached the stage where its people feel a sense of ownership for the environment, he said.

'It took some time to get them to understand (that) if you keep your environment nice and clean, your property values go up; if your environment is scruffy and dirty, then when you want to sell the flat, the price is down.'

MM Lee was so exercised by the 'Clean and Green' campaign that he told Mr Goh Chok Tong, upon handing over the reins as Prime Minister in 1990, that 'if you lose interest in this, (Singapore) will go back to the bad old days'. 

clare@sph.com.sg

This is really a very good article that touches on what we learnt in both Geography and Social Studies. Remember what we learnt under 'factors affecting uneven development', we conclude that colonialism can be both positive and negative. In this article, MM Lee has given credit to the British colonial power for planning the infrastructure as basic foundation for us. We also understand that government is also one key factor in determining the pace of development of a country.

I've a few questions for you to ponder:

1. Why do you think that 'Sprucing up and greening Singapore with trees all over the island was a key economic strategy' for Singapore when we gained independence? 

2. Why do you think it is difficult for the government 'to get people to change from Third World to First World behaviour' ?

Do write your comments under 'comment'. Looking forward to hear from you.

Sunday, 3 May 2009

Singapore is Asia's most liveable city




Good schools

Solid infrastructure

29 April 2009

It also boasts best infrastructure in the world: Survey

SINGAPORE has risen six places in a global ranking of cities with the highest quality of living, overtaking cities such as Paris in France and Honolulu and San Francisco in the United States.

At 26th place, the Republic also surpassed all its Asian neighbours to be the region's best performer in the latest Worldwide Quality of Living Survey by human resource consultancy Mercer.

As the icing on the cake, Singapore also topped Mercer's list of cities with the best infrastructure in the world. It proved superior in various areas, including electricity and water supply, telephone and mail services, public transport, traffic congestion and range of international flights from local airports.

Although it is often taken for granted, infrastructure 'has a significant effect on the quality of living experienced by expatriates', said Ms Cathy Loose, Mercer's Asia Pacific global mobility leader.

The development of Marina Bay and Sentosa Cove as new waterfront living areas appear to have boosted Singapore's position in the rankings.

'Singapore already has excellent housing, but now its new ocean-front and seafront living options have allowed the ranking to move even higher,' said Mr Derrick Kon, Mercer's Singapore global mobility leader.

He added that the 'high-quality houses and apartments' that are available for rent and the 'excellent selection of appliances and furniture' for residents definitely helped elevate Singapore's quality of life.

The other factor that contributed to Singapore's higher ranking is the presence of 'many good schools' in the city, said Mr Kon.

'Singapore has always had a lot of good schools and international schools, but now there are also more private schools offering university degrees,' he said.

'If expatriates come here with their children, this is one area they would be looking at, and in Singapore they would have a lot of options, with international programmes and university programmes.'

Singapore's strong position in quality of life rankings such as these could stand the nation in good stead in the current financial crisis, said Mr Mark Ellwood, managing director of Robert Walters, another human resource consultancy.

With companies looking to cut costs, many are reducing the number of international assignments and localising their expat compensation packages where possible, which means not giving out the 'hardship' allowances or benefits that are offered to expats who have to live in cities with a lower quality of life.

'There is perhaps less of an argument these days that Singapore is a hardship posting, so you don't have to give many expat benefits in terms of additional bells and whistles,' said Mr Ellwood.

Singapore is the only Asian city on the top 100 list that managed to increase its ranking this year, with the rest largely maintaining their previous positions.

China's capital, Beijing, moved up three places from 116 to 113 due to public transport improvements stemming from the Olympic Games last year, but Bangkok in Thailand and Mumbai in India both dropped in the rankings amid worsened stability and security.

Globally, the Austrian city of Vienna overtook Switzerland's Zurich to boast the best quality of life this year. European cities continued to dominate the top positions in the ranking, amid a sprinkling of Canadian and American cities.

Mercer publishes this list annually to help multinational companies determine an appropriate amount of compensation for expatriates sent to work in difficult locations.

fiochan@sph.com.sg