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Report details fossil fuel threat to 'Amazon of the seas'

More than 120 million people rely on it for subsistence

Report details fossil fuel threat to 'Amazon of the seas'

In this file picture taken on December 2, 2010, a colorful variety of coral growing at Pink Beach off Komodo island, in the marine ecosystem of Komodo National Park in Indonesia's East Nusa Tenggara Province, Coral Triangle

AFP

Fossil fuel activities overlap with marine protected zones

Increased tanker traffic raises the risk of oil spills, with 793 slicks recorded since 2020

The report calls for a halt on industrial activities in the Coral Triangle and a shift to clean energy

Fossil fuel exploration is threatening an ever-expanding swath of the Coral Triangle, one of the most biodiverse marine areas in the world, a report said Saturday.

Issued to coincide with the UN's COP16 summit on biodiversity in Colombia, the report warned expansion in oil, gas and liquefied natural gas (LNG) in the Indo-Pacific region was putting at risk marine species and the communities that rely on them.

Dubbed the "Amazon of the seas" for its species variety, the Coral Triangle covers over 10 million square kilometers (some four million square miles) in waters of Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Singapore, the Philippines, Timor-Leste and the Solomon Islands.

It contains three-quarters of the world’s known coral species, said the report by monitoring bodies including the threat-mapping research project Earth Insight, satellite imaging watchdog SkyTruth, and the Center for Energy, Ecology, and Development, a Filipino think tank.

The triangle is a home to six of the world's seven marine turtle species, and acts as a feeding ground for whales and other marine mammals.

More than 120 million people rely on it for subsistence.

Yet, oil and gas concessions and production areas overlap with tens of thousands of square kilometers of marine protected areas, said the report.

It noted more than 100 known offshore oil and gas blocks producing in the region. Another 450 blocks are being explored for future extraction.

"If all blocks were to go into production, about 16 percent of the Coral Triangle would be directly impacted by fossil fuel development," said the report.

It warned fossil fuel expansion will increase tanker traffic and the risk of oil spills.

Since July 2020, satellites have spotted 793 oil slicks in the Coral Triangle, said the report.

Almost all were created by transiting vessels, some by oil infrastructure.

"Cumulatively, all slicks covered an area over 24,000 km2 –- nearly enough oil to cover the land in the Solomon Islands," said the report.

Its authors called for a moratorium on oil, gas, mining, and other industrial activities in environmentally-sensitive areas within the Coral Triangle.

This aerial file picture taken on January 25, 2011, show islands and reefs in Indonesia's Wakatobi archipelago, Coral TriangleAFP

They also urged "leapfrogging the use of LNG as a transition fuel" as the world moves away from coal and gas, and moving directly to clean energy sources instead.

The report called for the triangle to be designated a "particularly sensitive sea area" in need of special protection from shipping.

The so-called Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework approved two years ago by 196 parties to the UN's Convention on Biological Diversity set 23 targets to "halt and reverse" biodiversity loss by 2030.

It includes ensuring that 30 percent of marine and coastal areas are "effectively conserved and managed," and 30 percent are "under effective restoration."

A report by Greenpeace Monday said only 8.4 percent of the global ocean enjoys protection to date.

"At the current rate, we won't hit 30 percent protection at sea until the next century," said Greenpeace policy advisor Megan Randles.

The biodiversity summit meant to measure progress towards achieving the UN goals.

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