2003.02.24
Russian Sets up First Nature Reserve for Grey Whales
MOSCOW, February 19. The first Russian
national marine wildlife reserve is to be established on the Sakhalin Shelf
in 2004. The Sakhalin Shelf area is inhabited by grey whales, which are on
the brink of extinction. This announcement was made yesterday at a press
conference by Amirkhan Amirkhanov, the head of the Russian Natural Resources
Ministry's Department for Highly Protected Natural Areas and Preserving Biodiversity.
According to Amirkhanov, since 2000 the region has been subject to industrial
extraction of oil by a floating platform. In recent years the negative impact
this has had on the environment, including drilling waste being disposed
of at sea and an increase in noise and ultrasonic rays, has caused the grey
whale population to fall. Amirkhanov said that the whales cannot get enough
to eat in such uncomfortable conditions and suffer from exhaustion.
Amirkhanov said that the Natural Resources Ministry is currently carrying
out an environmental evaluation of the Sakhalin 1 project. It calls for minimizing
the environmental damage from oil extraction and moving the drilling platform
out of the limits of the grey whales' summer feeding grounds, as well as
placing it as far as possible from the boundaries of the 'water pasture'.
It is also planned to move the pipeline leading from the platform to the shore
at least 12 nautical miles to the south. According to Amirkhanov, this is
being done so that the pipeline will not run through the basin where the grey
whales gather to feed.
IKAN <Iruka(dolphin)and Kujira(whale)
Action Network>
P.O. Box #10 Iruma Post Office Saitama
Prefecture Japan