Before China poop popped in WPS, reclamation already exacting toll on PH | Inquirer

Before China poop popped in WPS, reclamation already exacting toll on PH

By: - Content Researcher Writer /
/ 03:26 PM July 15, 2021

West Philippine Sea

(This report was first published in July 2021. We are reposting it in the wake of the continuing presence of Chinese military and militia vessels in West Philippine Sea inside Philippine exclusive economic zone)

MANILA, Philippines—The use by hundreds of Chinese vessels of the Philippines’ exclusive economic zone (EEZ) as a massive toilet for human excreta and other raw wastes was just one of the destructive impacts of China’s territorial grab in the area.

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Years before satellite images showed what analysts said was human poop being disgorged by China vessels that are stationary in West Philippine Sea, scientists had already calculated the ecological and economic damage being attributed to the Chinese intrusion and the numbers are mind boggling.

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On July 12, US-based tech firm Simularity said China’s dumping in West Philippine Sea, which is inside Philippine EEZ, of raw sewage, including human feces, was destroying coral reefs and creating a “dead zone” where fish could no longer breed.

“Coral reefs are basically habitats for a vast number of species, and it’s where most fish species go to breed and spawn,” said Liz Derr, co-founder and CEO of Simularity. “And if the reef habitat is damaged, the fish won’t go there to spawn anymore,” she said.

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Derr’s assessment came years after other scientists found signs of marine life dying in the area as a result of China’s occupation of reefs inside the Philippines’ EEZ and the reefs’ conversion into Chinese military bases.

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A 2019 study by three research scientists, including Leland Smith of the Georgetown University Law Center, said “the extent of the damage caused by island-creation is believed to be large” as reefs “support the largest concentration of marine biodiversity on Earth.”

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The researchers emphasized that West Philippine Sea “sits on the western edge of the Coral Triangle, which hosts the largest concentration of marine biodiversity on Earth including many threatened species.”

West Philippine Sea

Graphic by Ed Lustan

The study, “Evidence of Environmental Changes Caused by Chinese Island-Building”, looked into the environmental effects of island-building by China in the sea, which “result from dredging and can negatively impact” marine life.

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Filipino scientists, collectively known as Agham, earlier warned of the “dire ecological damage” of Chinese intrusion in West Philippine Sea

“With China’s illegal encroachment, fishes and other marine species are bound to lose their habitats as reclamation and the building of military bases has destroyed at least 16,000 hectares of reefs as of 2017,” Agham said.

“Rampant poaching of giant clams will also affect reefs,” the group said.

A 2017 study by John McManus said satellite images indicated at least 160 square kilometers of coral reefs had already been destroyed, including 17 square kilometers wiped out entirely by construction of artificial islands by China. At least 143 square kilometers of coral reef had also been destroyed by dredging and giant clam harvesting.

In April 2021, Agham said that the Philippines is losing an estimated P1.3 trillion a year as a result of coral reef damage caused by China’s intrusion and construction in West Philippine Sea.

Agham said the estimate was reached by multiplying the number or reefs destroyed with their economic value, which is more than P17 million per hectare of reef per year.

Philippine EEZ resources

Stretching west from Mindoro and Palawan toward Panatag or Scarborough Shoal and the Kalayaan Island Group (KIG) or Spratly Islands, West Philippine Sea covers the western maritime area of the Philippines.

The Department of Environment and Natural Resources–Biodiversity Management Bureau (DENR–BMB) said KIG has 30 percent of the Philippines’ total reef area.

According to 2018 data from the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR), the Philippines has at least 27,000 square kilometers of coral reefs.

Coral reefs, the National Ocean Service said, are part of the “most diverse and valuable ecosystems on Earth that supports more species per unit area than any other marine environment.”

Graphic by Ed Lustan

Because of the West Philippine Sea’s expansive coral reefs, the DENR–BMB said the area has about 500 species of coral reefs that are home to 1.94 million metric tons of large tuna, purple back squid, bonitos and trevallies.

With 62,000 to 91,000 metric tons of fish harvested yearly, West Philippine Sea has enough resources to feed 1.6 to 2.3 million Filipinos per year.

China’s dredging

Until the Chinese came with their dredging machines.

West Philippine Sea’s biological health was not just threatened. It was under intense assault.

Smith’s study said that island-building generally involves dredging-related work that is often followed by airfield construction to allow military expansion.

The study said between 2013 and 2017, China built nearly 1,300 hectares of new land. Vietnam and Taiwan built smaller islands.

Graphic by Ed Lustan

Dredging, which is the removal of sediments and debris from the bottom of the sea, resulted in environmental alterations which later had a massive impact on marine life.

“The potential causality between Chinese island-building operations and environmental degradation is potentially significant, as the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea form a distinct marine ecosystem, which serves as a significant source of larvae for regional coral reefs,” said the study.

In 2015, fishermen in Zambales retrieved from the sea a total of 34 dredging assemblies which bore Chinese markings. Each assembly consisted of a 12-meter long, 1-meter diameter iron pipe with three plastic-encapsulated foam floaters and flexible rubber connectors.

Impacts of island-building

Signs of dredging’s impact, Agham said, were seen as it investigated the construction by China of a military facility on Panganiban (Mischief) Reef where dredging destroyed a wide area of fish habitat—nearly 560 hectares of land reclaimed and a 2,644-meter long, 55-meter wide runway built on top of it.

Graphic by Ed Lustan

Through the use of satellite imagery, researchers noted an increase in the scatter, or displacement, of water by 350 percent in areas around the reef. Plumes of excess sediment being blown by winds covered a 250 square kilometer area at times during the island construction. The total area dredged was 1,200 square kilometers, about 42 times the size of Makati City.

“Dredging activities led to a decrease in biological health of the region resulting from the smothering of natural benthic habitats and reef complexes with sediment,” the researchers said.

Graphic by Ed Lustan

Simularity’s February 2021 report pointed out that despite the COVID-19 pandemic in late 2020, significant changes in seven areas of Mischief Reef were reported which indicated that there was no pause in China’s destruction of reefs to build islands on them.

Agham said that China’s destruction of reefs in West Philippine Sea will also lead to a loss in livelihood of at least 627,000 Filipino fisherfolk. Multiplied by at least four dependents per fisherman, that would be more than 2 million Filipinos at risk of losing their source of food.

Graphic by Ed Lustan

Opposition Sen. Risa Hontiveros, in 2020, said China owes the Philippine government at least P200 billion in environmental damages for the “annual losses of the country due to damaged reef ecosystems.”

There was no sign, however, of the Duterte administration taking China to task for the massive ecological damage.

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In statements made weeks apart, both China and Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte belittled the Philippines’ victory in the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague against China’s fictional nine-dash line claim in South China Sea, including waters inside the Philippines’ EEZ.

Using identical words, China and Duterte said the arbitral ruling was just a piece of waste paper.

TSB
TAGS: environment, INQFocus, Reclamation, South China

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