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Tiny Shrimps Causing Big Problems
Mahakam
Delta – French oil giant Total dominates the immense Mahakam
delta on the island of Borneo, but concern over the humble shrimp
has led the company to highlight an ecological catastrophe it fears
it will be wrongly blamed for.
Overexploitation of the crustaceans
has caused the disaster in the Indonesian province of East
Kalimantan on Borneo, research funded by Total and local officials
say. The region concerned, one of rich biodiversity, is composed of
interlacing channels cutting through luxuriant vegetation and fans
out over an area of 10,000 square kilometres (3,800 square miles) on
the east coast of Borneo.
Sediments transported by the
Mahakam river have trapped vast amounts of organic matter and
created, over the course of 10 million years, exceptional
hydrocarbon reserves. They are among the largest discoveries Total
has made anywhere in the world over the past 30 years.
The oil firm extracts 550,000
barrels of oil equivalent per day, mainly gas, an amount equal to
three quarters of France's gas consumption.
For a long time, the local
inhabitants carried on with their traditional lifestyle, putting up
with the methane tankers, drilling platforms and gas pipelines.
According to Total E and P
Indonesie president director Philippe Armand, the local population
lived off small-scale aquaculture of fish farming and traditional
fishing. The 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis that saw the
Indonesian rupiah plunge to a quarter of its value overturned all
that. The production of shrimp, sold in dollars, suddenly became
very profitable.
Investors without scruples flowed
in, along with thousands of workers from Java and Sulawesi.
"Since the economic crisis of the
years 19971998 people have been cutting all the mangrove, opening
new shrimp ponds, without any restrictions or law enforcement," "
said Muhammad Najib, in charge of environmental problems for Total E
and P Indonesie.
However, the mangrove swamps
provide valuable nutrients for the aquaculture. To replace them, the
shrimp pond owners have turned to artificial fertilisers, which
themselves deteriorate the ecosystem. It is a vicious circle.
In a study financed by Total, Cirad,
the French institute of agronomic research, concluded that
conversion of more than 800 square kilometres (300 square miles) of
mangroves into shrimp ponds, "involved, in the short term, the
degradation of the ecology of the delta, the appearance of diseases,
water pollution and an alarming salinisation of the ecosystem".
"The productivity of shrimp fanning
has fallen because of the damage caused to the natural environment,"
Bahteramsyah, environmental official for Kutai Kartanegara district,
told AFP.
He estimates only 20 per cent of
the original mangrove swamp remains. Total's activities in the delta
have nothing to do with this looming disaster but the oil giant
fears it will bear the brunt of the social consequences because of
its high profile in the region.
Armand estimates that in five years
around 15,000 people could find themselves without a livelihood if
there are no more shrimps.
"Those jobless people being
abandoned by all those tycoons will come knocking at our door and
ask `What have you done for us?'," he said.
"We fear that we will be totally
wrongly accused of being the source of the problem." Total has
decided to take the initiative and has earmarked two million dollars
over five years to promote sustainable management of the Mahakam
delta.
The company has replanted more than
three million mangrove seedlings, organised a symposium on the risks
posed by shrimp farming and is also training the villagers in more
environmentally friendly methods to farm crustaceans. -- Courtesy of Borneo
Bulletin
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