Crowds protest against paper mill waste in Lake Baikal
2010-02-12 00:00:00
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Crowds protest against paper mill waste in Lake Baikal
Source: WWF Feb. 16, 2010 ShareThis Over two thousand people gathered in central Irkutsk this weekend to protest the relaunch of the Baikal Paper and Pulp mills, an industry that releases toxic waste into lake Baikal, the world's single largest body of fresh water. Environmentalists, scientists, former mill employees, and several politicians spoke out in favor of the industry's closure and development of cleaner alternatives for the city of Baikalsk on the southern tip of the lake. They urged Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to cancel the government decree signed in January, which allowed the pulp-producing plant to release waste into the lake. The crowd cheered as speakers demanded a transparent audit of the dilapidated factory and alternative employment opportunities for Baikalsk citizens. Over 30,000 people have already signed a petition asking President Dmitry Medvedev to prevent what could become and environmental catastrophe and cancel the government decree which puts short-term financial interests above a sustainable future for the world's largest lake. “Despite statements that the ban to dump waste from the paper mill into Baikal will be lifted after 30 months, the official government decree has no such limits,' said Evgeny Shvarts, WWW-Russia ecopolicy director. 'The mill owners have broken their promises before, and we have no reasons to believe their words this time. WWF insists on redesigning the plant into a no-waste enterprise, and urges President Medvedev to cancel the decree that lifted the ban to dump waste into the lake that contains 20% of the world’s fresh water”. The gathering was nearly double the amount of people brought to Irkutsk from Baikalsk to rally support for the plant on the same day a few blocks away. Due to 25 million years of isolation and a diversity of deep-water habitats, the biodiversity of Lake Baikal - the deepest lake in the world - is unrivaled. Located in the south of Eastern Siberia, it is so large that it has been called an inland sea. It covers 31,500 sq. km and is 636 km. long, an average of 48 km wide, and 79.4 km at its widest point. Its water basin occupies about 557,000 sq. km. and contains about 23,000 cu. km. of water, that is, about one fifth of the world's reserves of fresh surface-water and over 80 per cent of the fresh water in the former Soviet Union. Its average depth is 730 m. and its maximum depth in the middle - 1,620 m. Among the lake's many habitats are recently discovered hydrothermal vents at a depth of about 400 meters that support sponges, bacterial mats, snails, transparent shrimp, and fish. There are about 2,500 species of known plants and animals in the lake, of which 1,500 are endemic. Preparations for Olympic games in Russia not meeting environmental standards - WWF Source: WWF International Feb. 8, 2010 ShareThis Despite a recent visit by the United Nations Environment Programme, preparations for the 2014 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games in Sochi, Russia are failing to meet proper environmental standards, according to WWF. On Jan. 28-30, a UNEP mission visited Sochi to assess environmental impact of preparation for the Games. UNEP representative Theodore Oben “expressed his satisfaction with the steps taken by the Sochi 2014 Organizing Committee to fulfill its environmental commitments in venues construction,” according to a statement from the Committee’s Joint Information Center. 'I am happy with the visit as it left me with the feeling that the entire team, including those doing the construction, are conscious of the importance of fully integrating environmental considerations in their work,” Oben said in the statement. “I also note with optimism the expressions of willingness to listen to and engage all stakeholders in efforts to make the Sochi Games green.' However, WWF and other NGOs, who have been monitoring the environmental damage in Sochi created by construction in anticipation of the Games, were expecting a different outcome from UNEP’s assessment. “WWF and other NGOs were looking forward to independent judgment of UNEP's mission to Sochi and a full report on environmental damage done and anticipated,” said Igor Chestin, WWF-Russia CEO. “Unfortunately, this did not happen and the environmental destruction continues.” Just before the visit, WWF informed UNEP that despite very significant progress made by Sochi-2014 organizers in 2009 to garner public input, decisions taken jointly by organizers and NGOs still are not being implemented. In addition, Sochi-2014 organizers admitted the poor quality of environmental impact assessments for Olympic facilities as early as on 25 Jan. 2009, but still failed to allocate funding to carry out a survey of those impacts, which means that crucial field data is still lacking, according to WWF. This could lead to serious damage to the Caucasus, a region with the highest level of biological diversity in Russia. For example, the environmental impact assessment for the combined railway and highway being built for the Games -- by far the largest project related to the Olympics at an estimated cost USD 8 billion -- is based on 2 weeks of zoological and botanical research done by fewer than 10 people. As a result, projects do not have reasonable mitigation plans, or technological solutions to minimize their environmental impact. During the visit, WWF and other NGOs also called UNEP’s attention to regular breach of laws for the sake of Olympic construction. In December 2009, they registered two such breaches: The Russian registration service – without any official government decision or a public discussion - changed the borders of the Caucasian biosphere reserve, a World Heritage site, to allow the building of public road to a resort, and Parliament approved an amendment to the Forest Code, allowing for the cutting of endangered species of trees and shrubs for construction of the Olympic facilities. Meanwhile, environmental activists were arrested twice - in August and October 2009 - near Olympic construction sites on the pretext they were violating the border zone regime without a special permit, although tourists and other visitors to the area are never asked for the permit and are not even aware that it is required. “Summing up, we believe that for the time being preparation for the Olympics is out of control, construction is of poor quality, vast damage to the environment has already been made, and NGOs are deprived of the ability to provide independent advice,” said Igor Chestin, WWF-Russia CEO. UNEP signed on in 2009 to act as an independent observer during the Sochi-2014 preperations to assess organizers’ ecological strategy, according to the Committee’s website. WWF is aksing UNEP and other international institutions to publicly withdraw from the process as further involvement would be seen as blessing for the environmentally and socially unacceptable practices. |