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Zenger
Zenger
World
Simona Kitanovska

Greenpeace UK Creates Underwater Boulder Barrier To Block Destructive Industrial Fishing

A boulder bearing Caroline Lucas' name is placed in the sea on September 1, 2022. Greenpeace UK place 18 limestone boulders on the seabed in the South West Deeps Marine Protected Area to block destructive industrial fishing.  (Kristian Buus,Greenpeace,SWNS/Zenger)

Greenpeace U.K. has placed 18 limestone boulders on the seabed in the western English Channel to block destructive industrial fishing.

On Thursday, September 1, campaigners and crew on board Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise sailed to the South West Deeps (East) Marine Protected Area to make a portion of the area off-limits to bottom-trawling.

Greenpeace, an independent global campaigning network, say the boulder action took place days after U.K. leaders failed to help secure a Global Ocean Treaty at IGC5 in New York, threatening the Government’s aim to achieve at least 30 percent ocean protection by 2030.

According to the campaigners: “Across the entirety of the South West Deeps (East)–more than 4,600 square kilometers– there is not one meter of protection from destructive industrial fishing. It is one of the most heavily fished so-called Marine Protected Areas in the U.K.

A boulder bearing Stephen Fry’s name is placed in the sea on September 1, 2022. Greenpeace UK place 18 limestone boulders on the seabed in the South West Deeps Marine Protected Area to block destructive industrial fishing.  (Kristian Buus,Greenpeace,SWNS/Zenger)

“In the last 18 months, the South West Deeps experienced almost 19,000 hours of industrial fishing, 3,370 hours of which was bottom-trawling. The majority of industrial fishing vessels in the area were from France (53 percent) followed by Spain (30 percent) and Great Britain (9 percent).”

Celebrities Hugh Fearnley Whittingstall, Simon Pegg, Stephen Fry, and Daniel Lismore are supporting the action, alongside Conservative politicians Henry Smith MP, Sir Peter Bottomley MP and Theresa May’s former Downing Street environment advisor Lord Randall, as well as the Green Party’s Caroline Lucas MP. Their names were stenciled onto the boulders before being dropped into the ocean.

The 18 boulders are Portland limestone, and each weighs between 500 kilograms (1,100 pounds) and 1,400 kilograms (3,080 pounds). They make it impossible for bottom-towed fishing gear to be dragged along the seabed. Artists from the Portland Sculpture and Quarry Trust created a giant ammonite sculpture out of one of the boulders, which will be placed on the seabed alongside the others. The sculptors took inspiration from the ammonite fossils found in Portland limestone.

A boulder bearing Caroline Lucas’ name is placed in the sea on September 1, 2022. Greenpeace UK place 18 limestone boulders on the seabed in the South West Deeps Marine Protected Area to block destructive industrial fishing.  (Kristian Buus,Greenpeace,SWNS/Zenger)

Will McCallum, Head of Oceans at Greenpeace U.K., said: “Right now, there’s an industrial fishing frenzy happening in U.K. waters, and what’s our Government doing about it? Greenpeace U.K. has created this underwater boulder barrier as a last resort to protect the oceans. We’d much rather the Government just did their job.

“It is outrageous that bottom-trawlers are allowed to scrape along the sea bed in most of our Marine Protected Areas every single day. They destroy huge swathes of the marine ecosystem and make a mockery of our so-called ‘protection’.

Produced in association with SWNS.

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