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Chinese activity destroying South China Sea environment, experts tell tribunal

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Chinese activity destroying South China Sea environment, experts tell tribunal

Roices Naguit, News5

November 27, 2015 9:51 AM

MANILA, Philippines -- Independent experts told the UN Permanent Court of Arbitration on Friday that Chinese activity in the South China Sea has been damaging and, unless checked, will continue to pose a serious threat to the marine environment of the vital waterway.

The experts testified on the third day of week-long hearings on the case the Philippines filed against China over territorial disputes in the South China Sea, which Manila also calls the West Philippine Sea.

China refuses to recognize the tribunal’s jurisdiction and participate in the proceedings in The Hague, The Netherlands.

One of the expert witnesses, Professor Clive Schofield, director of research at the Australian Center for Ocean Resource and Security at the University of Wollongong, presented his findings on 47 features that the tribunal had requested be studied to determine if they are insular, low tide, or high tide elevations, Malacanang deputy spokesperson Abigail Valte, who is with the Philippine team in The Hague, said in a bulletin.

He also presented satellite images showing Scarborough Shoal off Zambales at high and low tide. Scarborough, also called Bajo de Masinloc, sparked the current row after Chinese coast guard vessels began patrolling the area and driving off Filipino fishermen following the Philippine Navy’s apprehension of Chinese poachers in 2012.

The second expert, Professor Kent Carpenter, of the Department of Biological Sciences at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, said China’s actions have caused grave harm to the environment in the South China Sea due to its artificial island building activities, and that the damage to the complex coral reef ecosystem is close to catastrophic.

“One of our advocates, Professor Alan E. Boyle, presented to the Tribunal the damage China has done to the marine ecosystem; more specifically, to the complex ecosystem of coral reefs, biological diversity, and living resources in the South China Sea,” Valte said.

Left unchecked, he said, “China’s activities will continue to pose a significant threat to the marine environment of the South China Sea and of all the states which border the sea,” Valte added.

Boyle also accused China of reneging on its obligations under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea to protect and preserve the marine environment, citing instances of harmful fishing practices such as blast fishing, cyanide fishing, harvesting of giant clams, catching of turtles, and other endangered species.

He said China “is responsible for its failure to prevent its fishermen and vessels from engaging in illegal fishing activities,” Valte said.

He also detailed the series of near-collisions between Philippine and Chinese vessels in Scarborough Shoal from April to May 2012, which he said displayed China’s “deliberate disregard for international law” on the safety of maritime vessels.

Professor Bernard Oxman also told the tribunal of Chinese actions he said “aggravated and extended the dispute, even pending arbitration,” including preventing Philippine vessels from entering Second Thomas (Ayungin) Shoal to resupply a Marine detachment there, which he called part of “a deliberate policy to physically expel the Philippines and its nationals” from the disputed features and its surrounding waters.

The Philippines will continue its presentation to the tribunal on Monday.

Chinese activity destroying South China Sea environment, experts tell tribunal
 
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PH hits China for coral damage: 'Close to catastrophic'
November 27, 2015

MANILA, Philippines – The Philippines slammed China for the “close to catastrophic” damage it has inflicted on coral reefs through its island building activities in the disputed West Philippine Sea (South China Sea).

The Philippines also warned a United Nations-backed arbitral tribunal in The Hague, Netherlands, that China poses “a significant threat to the marine environment.”

Deputy Presidential Spokesperson Abigail Valte said the Philippines presented these arguments on Thursday, November 26, the third day of oral hearings on Manila’s case against Beijing over the West Philippine Sea.

Valte said Kent Carpenter, one of the Philippines’ expert witnesses, “drew the conclusion that China’s actions have cause grave harm to the environment in the South China Sea due to its artificial island building activities.”

Carpenter added that because of these reclamation activities, “the damage to the complex coral reef ecosystem is close to catastrophic.”

This comes as China builds artificial islands to assert its claim over the West Philippine Sea. The Philippines has protested these reclamation

The Philippines earlier said China's reclamation activities have destroyed311 hectares of coral reefs in the West Philippine Sea.

During Thursday's hearing, Philippine advocate Alan Boyle also “presented to the tribunal the damage China has done to the marine ecosystem.”

Boyle cited examples of harmful fishing practices employed by China, “such as blast fishing, cyanide fishing, harvesting of giant clams, and catching of turtles and other endangered species.”

He said China “is responsible for its failure to prevent its fishermen and vessels from engaging in illegal fishing activities.

‘Deliberate policy’ to expel Filipinos

“Boyle stated that, if unchecked, China’s activities will continue to pose a significant threat to the marine environment of the South China Sea and of all the states which border the sea,” he said, according to Valte.

At the same time, the Philippine team presented other moves by China “which aggravated and extended the dispute.”

Philippine team member Bernard Oxman, for one, cited instances when China blocked the Philippines from entering Ayungin Shoal (Second Thomas Shoal) to resupply its troops there.

“Oxman stressed that China’s denial of access forms part of ‘a deliberate policy to physically expel the Philippines and its nationals’ from the disputed features and its surrounding waters,” Valte said.

Boyle also pointed out “the series of near-collisions” between Philippine and Chinese vessels in April and May 2012.

These incidents happened in Panatag Shoal (Scarborough Shoal) in the West Philippine Sea, the site of a standoff between Philippine and Chinese vessels in April 2012 that heightened the sea dispute and eventually led to the filing of the case at The Hague.

“These incidents, according to Boyle, displayed China’s ‘deliberate disregard for international law’ on the safety of maritime vessels,” Valte said.

A day earlier, the Philippines told the tribunal in The Hague that China’s island building activities have destroyed the seabed in the South China Sea.

Before this, the Philippines complained to the tribunal that China has robbed it of its right to fish in the contested waters.

The hearings on the merits of the Philippines case will resume and end on Monday, November 30, Valte said

PH hits China for coral damage: 'Close to catastrophic'
 
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Why wont Philipines make the first step and remove all their nature destroying constructions from the SCS if they care so much about it?

Go on. Do it.

And when you are it remove all the pollution on the Philipines as well and return Maynila to mother nature. We will promise to honor your effort and make a wild life reservoir out of the Philipines.
 
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Why wont Philipines make the first step and remove all their nature destroying constructions from the SCS if they care so much about it?

Go on. Do it.

And when you are it remove all the pollution on the Philipines as well and return Maynila to mother nature. We will promise to honor your effort and make a wild life reservoir out of the Philipines.

Really so tell me did we destroy coral reef in massive scale china is the only one doing that typical chinese arrogance and lies
 
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Why wont Philipines make the first step and remove all their nature destroying constructions from the SCS if they care so much about it?

Go on. Do it.

And when you are it remove all the pollution on the Philipines as well and return Maynila to mother nature. We will promise to honor your effort and make a wild life reservoir out of the Philipines.

By your words, you want us to destroy the Philippines as a nation turn the whole archipelago as a wild-life reservoir right? What about the people, don't tell me you're going to make a human zoo?

You know what, do it with Bangkok first, or go to hell.
 
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In island construction, Philippines activity predates China some two decades.

China has been a leader in environmental protection technologies and initiatives in SCS. So many scientific explorations and studies are being conducted by China's universities and agencies as we speak.

I do not know how grounding a dangerous rusting ship near a reef contributes to ecology.
 
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In fact, with China's scientific contribution, the marine ecology has significantly improved over the years. This is especially so for Paracels and soon to be for China's Spratlys.
 
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