Thursday, October 4, 2012

Gambier Island residents fight plans for new artificial reef

Global BC | Gambier Island residents fight plans for new artificial reef: "“It’s the size of three football fields and when it goes down on that fine sediment sea bed, it is going to destroy it,’ says Andrew Strang with savehalkettbay.com. “The Department of Fisheries and Oceans was very clear, and said that this was unacceptable.”
"

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Thursday, September 27, 2012

Artificial reef program modified after rise in PCB's found

U.S. - Stripes: "In 2004, the USS Oriskany aircraft carrier was removed from the reserve fleet in Texas, remediated and in 2006 sunk off the Pensacola coast in a pilot project for artificial reefs. It's still the largest such reef in the country, said Self.

Site monitoring since then by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservaton Commission indicates a leap in PCB contamination in fish around the reef, he said. The results appear in a BAN report from July 2011 called "Dishonorable Disposal: The Case Against Dumping U.S. Naval Vessels at Sea."

Before the sinking, Self said, PCB concentrations in fish were 3.8 parts per billion (ppb). Afterward, they rocketed to 58.75 ppb.

In that time, total PCB concentrations in fish samples increased an average of 1,446 percent, he said."

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Monday, September 24, 2012

Obama Administration Scuttles Popular Artificial Reef Program | Sport Fishing

Obama Administration Scuttles Popular Artificial Reef Program | Sport Fishing: "Once touted by the agency as an environmentally responsible method for disposing of old, useless ships that were stripped clean for sinking, the program has now been called into question due to evironmental concerns, the report indicates. "

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Friday, September 21, 2012

Concerns likely won’t stop project | Local News | Coast Reporter, Sunshine Coast, BC

Concerns likely won’t stop project | Local News | Coast Reporter, Sunshine Coast, BC: "

“In light of this new study and the fact that the U.S. Marine administration has taken the dramatic step recently of effectively banning this practice in the United States, we respectfully ask that you halt this imminent sinking of the Annapolis and put a moratorium on the practice of making artificial reefs out of former armed forces vessels until further study,” Andrew Strang wrote on behalf of Save Halkett Bay."

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Thursday, September 20, 2012

Rules halt program using 'ghost fleet' ships as reefs | HamptonRoads.com | PilotOnline.com

Rules halt program using 'ghost fleet' ships as reefs | HamptonRoads.com | PilotOnline.com:

"Chief among the changes is a rule that all ships built before 1985 no longer can be sunk as reefs. The rule is targeted at curtailing PCBs, a highly toxic class of chemicals that, before 1985, often were found in ship wiring, insulation, gaskets and paint."

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Monday, September 10, 2012

U.S. Government Ends The Sinking Of Old Ships as Artificial Reefs

U.S. Government Ends The Sinking Of Old Ships as Artificial Reefs: " MARAD's new policy excludes from artificial reefing consideration of any vessel that was built before 1985 (and likely to contain PCBs). PCBs are a persistent toxic chemical family that is described by the U.S. EPA as potentially carcinogenic to humans and builds-up in the marine food chain. They are banned from use and production under the U.S. Toxic Substances Control Act."

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Sinking fate of HMCS Annapolis destroyer generates environmental concern - The Globe and Mail

Sinking fate of HMCS Annapolis destroyer generates environmental concern - The Globe and Mail:

 "“We haven’t seen anything from the province that shows us the ship has been cleaned. The people in Howe Sound are not confident it is clean,” he said, expressing concerns that polychlorinated biphenyls, mercury and other contaminants might be released from the sunken hulk."

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Sunday, September 9, 2012

A thousandfold increase in PCB levels and millions of dollars lost, the real cost of artificial reefs


A report  by the Basel Action Network highlights the environmental risks and economic losses caused by artificial reefing. In one reef, the total PCB concentrations in fish samples increased 1,446% on average from pre-sinking to postsinking"

"Study of the sunken Ex-USS ORISKANY, reveals startling toxic PCB
leaching from the sunken aircraft carrier. According to the data, the leaching is occurring
at more than twice the Navy’s and EPA’s presinking modeled expectations of 2006. In fact, leaching PCBs from the sunken vessel has been taken up by fish at the reef site at levels above the Florida Department of Health fish consumption advisory threshold. Total PCB concentrations in fish samples increased 1,446% on average from pre-sinking to postsinking"
http://ban.org/library/Dishonorable%20Disposal_BAN%20Report.pdf

MARAD change in policy scuttles sinking of USS Kawishiwi

A planned artificial reef of the USS Kawishiwi has been cancelled following the U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD) 's decision not to sink ships made prior to 1985 due to concerns about PCB's.

'"The vessel, which is docked in Suisun Bay, was withdrawn from the list of ships after MARAD announced that it had revised its policies and the Kawishiwi will now be part of the ship recycling programme. The agency is now excluding all ships that are likely to contain Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs)."
MARAD has offered a replacement ship which meets the new standards.
The CEO of California Ships to Reefs, Joel Geldin said: “We have always made ocean safety the top priority in our reefing plans and we’re willing to move forward with MARAD, working with whatever standards they require.”
read more here:
 MARAD Withdraws Plans to Turn USS Kawishiwi into Artificial Reef in California - The Scuba Diving Place:

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U.S. Government Ends The Sinking Of Old Ships as Artificial Reefs


Recognizing the potential environmental impact and loss of economic revenue, the Obama administration has made significant chances to the federal  artificial reefing program 

"The U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD) has adopted a new policy that effectively terminates the federal artificial reefing program that allowed the scuttling of old ships for so-called "artificial reefs" – a practice that dates back to the Liberty Ship Act of 1972. Since the program's inception, approximately 45 ships have been disposed of at sea, along with untold tons of toxic substances such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and heavy metals built into each vessel, as well as many millions of dollars-worth of steel and non-ferrous metal resources. "

Read more here


U.S. Government Ends The Sinking Of Old Ships as Artificial Reefs:

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Sunday, May 13, 2012

Regulations leave anglers, boat captains frustrated | TuscaloosaNews.com

"Federal officials are hesitant to accept data collected from reefs off Alabama because the reefs are almost entirely artificial — objects sunk to create fish habitat. Some people debate whether the red snapper are actually reproducing on artificial reefs or if they are just attracted to artificial reefs, Anson said.
The ratio of red snapper to other fish is very high on artificial reefs.
“They're 95 percent of the fish on our reefs,” Anson said. “That's not what you would expect to find on a natural reef.”"
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Regulations leave anglers, boat captains frustrated | TuscaloosaNews.com:

Monday, March 5, 2012

The Associated Press: AP ENTERPRISE: Navy 'Sinkex' raises pollution fear

The Associated Press: AP ENTERPRISE: Navy 'Sinkex' raises pollution fear:


PCB's found in fish near an aircraft carrier sunk in 2006 as an artificial reef near Pensacola, Florida have raised concerns about the impacts, although the ship was located much closer to shore and in much shallower waters than Sinkex vessels.

"Annual monitoring by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission of waters around the USS Oriskany concluded that fish around the carrier exceeded state and federal PCB standards in the first two years. Florida's PCB limits are 50 parts per billion for safe human consumption— EPA standards are 20 ppb. Fish later collected saw a drop in those levels overall, but some still exceeded the EPA and Florida standards."
read more

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Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Concrete dropped in ocean for fisho's - ABC Northern Territory - Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)

Concrete dropped in ocean for fisho's - ABC Northern Territory - Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC): "We like to say deploy instead of dumping"

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Can we fake the reefs? | News | Practical Fishkeeping:

""Many of the most ardent advocates of artificial reefs seem to have large quantities of bulky waste to dispose of — be they tyres, power station ash, railway stock, cars, ships and oil rigs. I once saw a newspaper photograph of three rubbish trucks being pushed off the side of a boat in Thailand."

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