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October 19–22nd, 2010 Hawks Cay, Duck Key, Florida Keys
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October 19–22nd, 2010 Hawks Cay, Duck Key, Florida Keys
http://us1.campaign-archive.com/?u=fb7357aafe4ce51894c41682b&id=19f37e162a&e=1c101f3bc0
About the Awards
The Blue Frontier/Peter Benchley Awards recognize outstanding achievements leading to the protection of our coasts and ocean and the communities that depend on them. In addition they provide an opportunity for leaders and innovators in different aspects and sectors of ocean work to meet and acknowledge each other, and to celebrate what we have accomplished and the wonders of our blue world.
Science: Jesse Ausubel, Program Director, Census of Marine Life Friday, June 25, 2010 Master of Ceremonies Music by Dinner, dancing, and an albino alligator host at the premier science and marine museum For individual sponsorship information click here Purchase tickets online using our secure server by clicking on the image below Please purchase tickets early as this event has limited seating and will sell out. Parking available at Museum. Event Chairs |
Miyoko Sakashita of the Center for Biological Diversity advises us that a group letter to the US EPA on ocean acidification has over 60 organization signatories. She noted that: It was wonderful to have everyone speak up on this important issue. Below is a final version of the letter. Additionally, 40 members of Congress also endorsed a letter to the EPA in support of action on ocean acidification.
Here’s the letter:
Planet 1 Ocean * 1Sky * 350.org * Alaska Center for the Environment American Fisheries Society * Blue Climate Solutions * Blue Frontier Campaign Blue Ocean Institute * California Coastkeeper Alliance * Campaign to Safeguard America’s Waters * Caribbean Conservation Corporation * Casco Baykeeper Center for Biological Diversity * Center for Ecosystem Management and Restoration Citizens Campaign for the Environment * Clean Ocean Action * Clean Water Action Climate Protection Campaign * Conservation Law Foundation * Coral Reef Alliance (CORAL) * CORALations * Cry of the Water * Defenders of Wildlife * Earth Island Institute EcoLaw Massachusetts * Environmental Defense Center * Environmental Protection Information Center (EPIC) * Friends of the Earth * Global Exchange * Greenaction for Health and Environmental Justice * Greenpeace USA * Gulf Restoration Network Hawaii Preparatory Academy * Humane Society of the United States * Humboldt Baykeeper International Center for Technology Assessment * International Marine Mammal Project of Earth Island Institute * International Rivers * KAHEA: The Hawaiian-Environmental Alliance * Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center * Living Oceans Foundation Marine Conservation Biology Institute * Mass Audubon * Natural Resources Defense Center (NRDC) * Niijii Films producers of A Sea Change * Northcoast Environmental Center * Oceana * Ocean River Institute * Pacific Environment * Palm Beach County Reef Rescue * Rainforest Action Network * Reef Relief * Sailors for the Sea San Diego Coastkeeper * San Francisco Baykeeper * Santa Barbara Channelkeeper Snorkel Bob Foundation * Spirit of the Sage Council * SustainUS * Turtle Island Restoration Network * Waterkeeper Alliance * Western Nebraska Resources Council Wildcoast * Wild Fish Conservancy * Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation May 21, 2010
Clean Water Act Section 303(d):
Notice of Call for Public Comment on 303(d) Program and Ocean Acidification
Environmental Protection Agency
1200 Constitution Ave., NW, Mailcode: 4503–T
Washington, DC 20460.
Re: Protect our oceans from acidification under the Clean Water Act
On behalf of our organizations and millions of members, we write to support the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) taking action to address ocean acidification. Specifically, we urge the EPA to issue guidance to address ocean acidification under the Clean Water Act.
Protecting our oceans from the threat of ocean acidification
The world’s oceans are becoming more acidic from absorbing carbon dioxide emissions from the atmosphere to the tune of 22 million tons each day. Surface waters have become 30% more acidic since the industrial age, and scientists predict that if carbon dioxide emissions continue unabated seawater acidity will increase 100-150% by the end of the century (
Ocean acidification impairs the ability of marine animals — including corals, plankton, and shellfish — to build the protective shells they need to survive. Scientific evidence shows that ocean acidification may harm many marine organisms, and some of these impacts are already underway.
Studies of certain corals, shellfish, and plankton show that they will have difficulty building and maintaining their structures under future conditions of acidification (
Slower growth rates have already been observed in some corals, and many corals could be lost within a few decades due to global warming and acidification (
Pacific Coast oyster hatcheries are experiencing difficulties that may be related to acidification, and two of the largest hatcheries report production rates down by as much as 80% (
Some plankton are growing thinner and weaker shells in polar regions, which are more vulnerable to ocean acidification (
Studies show that exposure of fish, squid, and other animals to future levels of ocean acidification may disrupt metabolism and other biological functions (
Ocean acidification could have serious impacts on marine biodiversity, as well as the coastal communities and economies that depend on our oceans. The marine ecosystems threatened by ocean acidification provide valuable services ranging from fishing and shellfish harvesting to coastal tourism and protection. To prevent some of its worst consequences it is imperative that EPA take swift action to address ocean acidification.
Nature 437:681-686). Thus, ocean acidification is becoming one of the greatest threats to seawater quality. Limnol. Oceanogr. 54(6):2072–2080, J. of Marine Sci. 65: 414–432, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst. 10:Q07005). Science 323:116-119, Marine Pollution Bull. 58:1428-1436). PLoS ONE 4(5):e5661). Nature Geosci. 2:276-280). J. of Oceanogr. 60:705-718; PNAS 105:20776-20780; J. of Oceanogr. 60:731-741). EPA leadership and guidance on ocean acidification is needed
We support EPA implementing the Clean Water Act to address ocean acidification. The Clean Water Act’s objective is to restore and maintain the chemical, physical and biological integrity of the nation’s waters. It has successfully reduced water pollution and must be fully employed to address ocean acidification. Section 303(d) of the Clean Water Act is well suited to address ocean acidification because it was designed for water pollution problems originating from various sources, including the atmosphere.
EPA should direct prompt action while such efforts can still avert the worst impacts of ocean acidification. Under the Clean Water Act, EPA can and should develop a framework coordinating state and federal action to prevent ocean acidification. Specifically, we urge EPA to:
Issue guidance on how to address ocean acidification under the Clean Water Act, including precautionary strategies for addressing this water quality problem.
Work with states to ensure the use of the best available science on ocean acidification when establishing water quality standards, identifying threatened and impaired waters, and calculating and implementing total maximum daily loads.
Provide guidance for state, tribal, and territorial governments on how to monitor ocean acidification and its ecological consequences; as well as promote management and adaptation planning for coastal and marine areas.
EPA guidance would fulfill a critical need because as ocean acidification becomes more severe, all coastal regions will have to confront its impacts. Ocean acidification is already becoming apparent in vulnerable regions, including the entire West Coast, Alaska’s productive waters, and the Caribbean, which could soon threaten Florida’s coral reefs (
EPA action is needed to protect our coasts and oceans from the alarming impacts of ocean acidification. Moreover, approaches to ocean acidification under the Clean Water Act can and will complement local, state, and federal efforts to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. We thank you again for your leadership on environmental issues and support EPA’s efforts to protect America’s oceans and coasts from ocean acidification.
Science 320:1490-92, Oceanogr. 22: 160-171, J. of Geophys. Res. 113:C10031). EPA guidance should inform strategic responses to ocean acidification. Most sincerely,
David Guggenheim, Ph.D., President 1 Planet 1 Ocean
Gillian Caldwell, Executive Director 1Sky
May Boeve 350.org
Toby Smith, Executive Director Alaska Center for the Environment
Gus Rassam, PhD, Executive Director American Fisheries Society (AFS)
Steven Lutz, Executive Director Blue Climate Solutions
David Helvarg, President Blue Frontier Campaign
Carl Safina, Ph.D., President Blue Ocean Institute
Sara Aminzadeh, Programs Manager California Coastkeeper Alliance
Gershon Cohen Ph.D., Project Director Campaign to Safeguard America’s Waters Project of Earth Island Institute
David Godfrey, Executive Director Caribbean Conservation Corporation
Joe Payne Casco Baykeeper
Miyoko Sakashita, Oceans Director Center for Biological Diversity
Andrew J. Gunther, Ph.D., Executive Director Center for Ecosystem Management and Restoration
Adrienne Esposito, Executive Director Citizens Campaign for the Environment
Cindy Zipf, Executive Director Clean Ocean Action
John DeCock, President Clean Water Action
Mike Sandler, Co-Founder Climate Protection Campaign
Christopher M. Kilian, Vice President Conservation Law Foundation.
Brian Huse, Executive Director Coral Reef Alliance (CORAL)
Mary Ann Lucking, Director CORALations
Stephanie Clark Cry of the Water
Noah Matson, Vice President for Climate Change and Natural Resources Adaptation Defenders of Wildlife
John A. Knox, Executive Director Earth Island Institute
Margaret E. Sheehan, Partner EcoLaw Massachusetts
Linda Krop, Chief Counsel Environmental Defense Center
Scott Greacen, Executive Director EPIC – the Environmental Protection Information Center
Bradley Angel, Executive Director Greenaction for Health and Environmental Justice
Marcie Keever, Clean Vessels Campaign Director Friends of the Earth
Kirsten Moller, Executive Director Global Exchange
Damon Moglen, Global Warming Campaign Director Greenpeace USA
Cyn Sarthou, Executive Director Gulf Restoration Network
Marc R. Rice Director, Science and Technology Hawaii Preparatory Academy
John W. Grandy, Ph.D., Senior Vice President Humane Society of the United States
Pete Nichols Humboldt Baykeeper
Andrew Kimbrell, Executive Director International Center for Technology Assessment
David Phillips, Director International Marine Mammal Project of Earth Island Institute
Payal Parekh, Climate Scientist International Rivers
Marti Townsend, Program Director KAHEA: The Hawaiian-Environmental Alliance
Lesley Adams, Rogue Riverkeeper Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center Philip G. Renaud, Executive Director Living Oceans Foundation
John Guinotte, Ph.D., Marine Biogeographer Marine Conservation Biology Institute
John J. Clarke, Director of Public Policy & Government Relations Mass Audubon
Bradford H. Sewell, Senior Attorney Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC)
Barbara Ettinger, Director Niijii Films, Inc. producers of
A Sea Change: Imagine a World without Fish Tara Stetz Northcoast Environmental Center
Jeff Short, Pacific Science Director Oceana
Rob Moir, PhD, Executive Director Ocean River Institute
David Gordon, Executive Director Pacific Environment
Ed Tichenor, Director Palm Beach Reef Rescue
Rebecca Tarbotton, Acting Executive Director Rainforest Action Network
Paul G. Johnson, State Programs & Policy Director Reef Relief
Dan Pingaro, CEO Sailors for the Sea
Jill Witkowski San Diego Coastkeeper
Jason Flanders San Francisco Baykeeper
Kira Redmond, Executive Director Santa Barbara Channelkeeper
Robert Wintner Snorkel Bob Foundation
Leeona Klippstein, Executive Director Spirit of the Sage Council
Kyle Gracey, Chair SustainUS
Teri Shore, Program Director Turtle Island Restoration Network
Kristine Stratton, Executive Director Waterkeeper Alliance
Buffalo Bruce, Staff Ecologist Western Nebraska Resources Council
Serge Dedina, Executive Director Wildcoast
Kurt Beardslee, Executive Director Wild Fish Conservancy
Scott Black Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation
http://thehill.com/blogs/e2-wire/677-e2-wire/98243-green-coalition-blasts-senate-climate-bill
By Jim Snyder – 05/17/10 05:11 PM ET
The new Senate climate change bill has some green groups seeing red.
Fifteen organizations, including Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, the Center for Biological Diversity, and the Friends Committee on National Legislation, which is a Quaker lobbying group, have formed the Climate Reality Check coalition to oppose the legislation, released last week by Sens. John Kerry (D-Mass.) and Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.).
“The well-being of our nation and the world are being sacrificed for the interests of big polluters, which continue to rake in record profits at the expense of the environment and the public,” the group said in a statement.
A number of other environmental organizations have praised the bill, even as they noted problems with some provisions, such as the measure’s support for nuclear power and offshore drilling. The climate reality coalition, obviously, has drawn a much sharper line in the sand.
The groups want sharper pollution reductions; the EPA to retain the authority to regulate greenhouse gases through the Clean Air Act; and to “reject offsets and other loopholes that prevent pollution reductions from taking place in the U.S.,” according to a news release.
Special thanks to Richard Charter
http://www.independent.co.uk/travel/americas/the-battle-for-the-beaches-of-cancun-1968917.html
Mexico’s best-loved sun and sand destination is fighting fierce and hard to stop the erosion of its beaches, but is the cost too high? Sarah Barrell reports
Sunday, 9 May 2010
But this spring, things appear to be on the up. Travellers have been returning to Cancun by the chartered planeload, driven by cut-price packages available even in the smartest resorts, and the sands are once again there to welcome them. The beaches, trumpets the Cancun Convention and Visitors Bureau (CVB), are back and they’re better than ever. The coast of Cancun has undergone a complex, highly political and remarkably long-winded beach recovery project costing $71m (£46.7m). From my vantage point on the boardwalk of Playa Delfines, a rare undeveloped patch of beach on the western tip of Cancun’s tightly packed hotel strip, things certainly looked a million dollars: surf-like champagne, water of an impossible, iridescent turquoise and a fine powder of white calcium carbonate that seems reduced in brilliance to go merely by the name sand.
I hadn’t been in Cancun for 15 years. Downtown, previously no more than a couple of blocks of largely residential buildings, is now a sprawling administrative centre, while the “Zona Hotelera” has an almost uninterrupted terrace of high-rise tourist addresses along its beachfront. But the beach itself, all 6.8 miles of it, looked just as idyllic as I remembered. “A Japanese tourist asked me if we dyed the water,” said Erika Mitzunaga Magana from Cancun CVB, as we stood surveying the beach, newly loaded with eight million cubic metres of sand, sloping gently down to that impossibly blue water. A fantastical idea? Not when you consider that the resort of Cancun is an entirely preplanned and man-made destination. The water is without embellishment, as is (or was) the sand. The rest? Legend has it that Cancun was selected for development by computer, then planned and executed equally as systematically. Almost, but not quite.
In the late 1960s, a government-backed consortium of Mexican bankers was looking for a big tourism investment. They picked a spot, a narrow spit of Caribbean coast so remote it hadn’t been properly named. Some maps called it Kankun (“nest of snakes” in Maya), others “Kan Kun,” or “Can Cún” (the Spanish form). There were barely any human settlements, just marshes, mangroves and, the incredible dune-backed beaches, separated from the mainland by two narrow canals that opened on to a huge emerald lagoon system. The first hotels opened in 1974 and the international airport was inaugurated with 2,600m of runway and capacity for wide-body jets. And in they came.
Like any good boy band, Cancun was fabricated but is no less gorgeous for that, and three decades later, it and the adjoining Riviera Maya that runs 80 miles down to the Mayan ruins at Tulum bring in about 50 per cent of Mexico’s tourism revenue. Cancun alone has 27,000 hotel rooms (unofficial figures suggest it’s more like 38,000), so the erosion of its beaches is of national interest. Last month, Felipe Calderon, the president of Mexico, no less, came to declare the beaches open – ironically, swiftly decamping after the ribbon cutting to the more low-key charms of nearby Cozumel island for celebratory drinks. Mr Calderon’s helicopter cavalcade could be seen buzzing back to Mexico City along the Riviera Maya shortly after that. All fixed and home in time for tea? It very much depends on whom you talk to.
The plumped-up beaches naturally come as a relief to the tourist industry; less so the Mexican taxpayer who has partly forked out for the project. And less still the environmental non-governmental organisations that are lining up to defend this eco-rich stretch of coastline.
“There’s been no consistent policy on how to conserve the beaches,” said Gonzalo Merediz from Amigos de Sian Ka’an, one of the area’s largest NGOs, when I took a tour of his Cancun office. Here, walls were plastered with the countless accolades awarded to Sian Ka’an, a biosphere reserve and Unesco World Heritage listed area, 80 miles east of Cancun, rich with tropical forests, mangroves and marshes. The reserve also encompasses part of the Mesoamerican Reef, second in size only to Australia’s Great Barrier. Here, tourism development is restricted but with Cancun’s sprawl heading further east, the group is monitoring coastal development and erosion closely.
Cancun, a young resort, lost its beachy charms early in life thanks to the removal of its dunes and grasses, which play an integral role in keeping the sand from drifting into the ocean. Add to this the weight of hotel buildings on what is a very narrow sand bar, structures that additionally compound the problem by blocking natural wind flow from sea to lagoon, and you have a complex recipe for beaches that leave with the tide – especially during hurricane season. “Each hotel has its own idea of how to keep sand in front of its property,” explained Merediz. “Artificial reefs, sea walls, re-establishing the dunes. But after hurricane Wilma, $20m was spent on a recovery project – the sand quickly eroded – and now $90m. And the same amount or more will be needed again without proper planning.”
The science of why the beaches have eroded is not nearly as complex as the politics attached to their recovery. Over the past decade, the responsibility for this has skipped back and forth from federal to state levels. After hurricanes Gilbert and Wilma hit the coast, interest jumped to a national level and costly research into how, where and why the sands were vanishing was contested, scrapped and done all over again. Experts from such beach-beleaguered countries as Cuba, Dubai and Spain have been called in to give advice. This time the answer has been to bring in more than 1,000 tons of hi-tech machinery to dredge the ocean floor (which went down like dynamite fishing with local conservation groups) and build a huge sea wall at Cancun’s eastern tip to catch the constantly shifting sands.
Will the wonder wall work? Even if it does, there’s no doubt from any camp that the beach recovery will need repeating at regular intervals. “It’s not sustainable to rebuild the beach every five years,” said Marisol Venegas from local consultancy Redes Toursimo. In the 1970s, long before tourism came with an eco prefix and footprints were seen in the sand, not in carbon, Cancun’s development was comparatively humanitarian and cutting edge. “There was a plan,” Marisol explained. “A great, detailed plan but …” Marisol has spent the past 23 years working in the tourist industry in Cancun, playing integral roles in the development of the destination. We met for a coffee in Toks, an American-style diner far from the tourist strip amid the malls and offices of Cancun’s municipal sprawl.
Cancun, Marisol explained, was to have been one of the world’s great tourism projects, a resort where not only every tourist avenue was thought out but also each municipal park plotted and residential zone catered for. “But it grew too fast,” she said. “Municipal facilities, services, sewage and such; it’s all vastly overtaxed. Sand is the least of our problems.” For Marisol, Cancun is a perfect example of why mass tourism, investing it all on one honey-pot destination, doesn’t work. “It’s not the invisible hand of the market or the weather that’s the enemy – it’s bad planning.”
We drove 20 minutes north into Cancun’s forgotten residential zones, squatted land, where electricity is siphoned from the main grid by tela de araña (spider webs) of wires, and churches – lean-tos of corrugated iron – are more plentiful than shops. Hammocks were slung between doorways of tumbledown houses, a place of sleep and, if gruesome local paper reports are to be believed, a place of final rest. Cancun has one of Mexico’s highest rates of alcoholism, depression and suicide. Here, the phrase hanging in your hammock has a decidedly sinister meaning: it’s the preferred method of suicide. But Marisol, like many I spoke to, still loves and is loyal to Cancun. Alongside her tourism work, she has founded a non-profit high school. Everyone she is surrounded by seems to be similarly motivated, leading everything from community choirs to environmental pressure groups.
Puerto Morelos, 20 minutes west of Cancun is a living example of local activism. Here, children ride horses bareback across grass-carpeted plazas and fishermen still sell their daily catch – fleshy octopus and prized langoustines – from the scruffy little marina. Tourism comprises a few low-rise, brightly painted guest houses run by 1960s dropouts and the beach, a rarity for this region, has easy public access. Puerto Morelos, known locally as Muerto (“dead”) Morelos for its lack of development, is a last stand on the Cancun-Tulum mass tourism corridor, but even this town’s sleepy days could be numbered. There are plans to expand the community from its current population of fewer than 10,000 residents to more than 150,000 people by building housing for hotel industry workers and removing mangroves in the process.
Mangroves not only form a buffer zone protecting coastlines from erosion and flooding but also form a vital sinkhole for carbon. In theory it’s illegal to develop on mangroves in Mexico, and with 33 per cent of land within this state protected, compared with a national average of about 11 per cent, Puerto Morelos should be safe. Yet with few resources to police protected areas, things aren’t as sound as they seem. “Tourism is a threat but also an opportunity,” said Alfredo Arellano, regional director of the Mexican government’s Protected Areas Commission. “Cancun originated as a mass tourism destination but there are opportunities to create new models for development.”
Along with a budding range of eco-tourism initiatives within reserves like Sian Ka’an, Arellano noted the latest generation of hotels along the Riviera Maya, such as the new Banyan Tree and Fairmont, have greener construction and operating practices. “They are still few in number but they are creating models that are successful and sustainable.” And this coast – reef, mangroves, dunes and all – is worth sustaining. I end my trip on the beach in Tulum, which along with Cancun regularly gets voted the best stretch of sand in Mexico, but unlike Cancun, hotels here are still low rise and locally run. Yet 15 years ago the only accommodation here had been tented. With an international airport in the pipeline, could Tulum become another Cancun? If so, let’s just hope plans are not made on shifting sands.