Guest guest Posted March 4, 2000 Report Share Posted March 4, 2000 This should have been up at GREEN VIBES a week ago. Dunno what happened...- Paul. > - > Sunday, February 27, 2000 3:10 PM > SAN IGNACIO LAGOON > > > > Feb. 25, 2000, 9:08PM > > > > Bid for salt facility on Mexican lagoon leads to whale of a fight > > By DUDLEY ALTHAUS > > Copyright 2000 Houston Chronicle > > > > SAN IGNACIO LAGOON, Mexico -- With a chill wind frothing the water's > > surface, tourists and locals alike peer from their boats, their eyes > > sweeping the wide but shallow bay for signs of gray whales. > > > > Wintering geese bounce in the shoreline water. Herons, egrets and other > > birds swoop in solo or by the twos and threes to feed in the shallows. > > Desert brush shimmies in the persistent breeze. The setting sun paints the > > distant mountains across the lagoon a mellow gold that slowly darkens to > an > > angry maroon. > > > > And then come the whales: Spouts of mist shoot 10 feet from the sea's > > surface. A portion of an animal's back glances briefly from the water, > then > > disappears again. A tail rises here, a fin over there. The upper half of a > > whale, 15 feet of flesh, shoots like a vertical pillar of stone from the > > dark water as the animal scans its surroundings. > > > > This protected place, tucked about halfway down the Pacific Coast of > > Mexico's Baja California peninsula, is the last untarnished winter refuge > of > > the gray whale, a once-endangered mammal that journeys to these southern > > waters each year from Alaska to mate and give birth. > > > > For six years now, a company jointly owned by the Mexican government and > the > > Japanese industrial conglomerate Mitsubishi has proposed to build a > > sprawling salt-producing facility on the shore of the lagoon. The project > > would be the largest of its kind in the world. > > > > And, for nearly as long, a sometimes unwieldy alliance of local fisherman, > > Mexico City intellectuals and lawyers as well as several well-funded U.S. > > environmental groups have beaten back the effort. They fear the project > will > > damage the whales' habitat and bring the demise of a rural way of life. > > > > In the process, the proposed saltworks has been caught up in public > > wrangling. It's all part of a changing Mexican landscape in which > citizens' > > groups, sometimes with the aid of international counterparts, have elbowed > > their way into an expanding circle of political players. > > > > " The country has never had this kind of open debate, " says Joaquin Ardura, > > the technical director of the salt company, Exportadora de Sal, known as > > ESSA. " It's something new. These are all steps toward more open politics. " > > > > Now, ESSA officials say, the company will make another try at getting > > government approval for the San Ignacio Lagoon project soon, perhaps > within > > the next few weeks. The new proposal will include enhanced environmental > > safeguards for the whales, Ardura says. > > > > While the Mexican authorities have sided with the project's opponents in > the > > past, environmentalists say this time may prove otherwise. > > > > " This year will be decisive, " says Homero Aridjes, the Mexico City poet > and > > environmental gadfly who first marshaled Mexican and foreign opponents for > > protests against the proposed facility. " Sometimes governments approve > > unpopular projects during a president's last year in office. " > > > > President Ernesto Zedillo, who railed against environmentalists and other > > " anti-globalization " citizens' groups at last month's convention of > > government and business leaders in Davos, Switzerland, leaves office in > > December. He will be replaced by the winner of the July 2 presidential > > election. > > > > In his Davos speech, Zedillo argued that economic development, led by > > industries like the ESSA saltworks, offer poor countries such as Mexico a > > chance to become prosperous. He said that only when the countries become > > more affluent can they afford to worry about things like the environment. > > > > But economic growth brought by the 6-year-old North American Free Trade > > Agreement, which will drop most duties and other trade barriers between > > Mexico and the United States and Canada by 2009, has so far largely failed > > to improve Mexico's threatened environment. > > > > Ardura and other ESSA executives say that the proposed saltworks would > bring > > badly needed jobs to a remote and impoverished corner of Mexico. Citing > > studies by a host of prominent whale experts that the company has hired, > the > > executives insist that the operation would not harm the whales. > > > > But opponents offer several arguments against the project. > > > > They say that building the saltworks in one of Mexico's most ecologically > > fragile areas would irreparably harm the gray whales' nursery deep in the > > lagoon. > > > > They say that industrial development, no matter how carefully planned, > would > > expose one of the most pristine coastlines in North America to population > > growth and environmental degradation. > > > > They say that allowing development at the lagoon would make a mockery of > > environmental statements by government officials. > > > > And, they say, if the San Ignacio Lagoon can be developed, any place can. > > > > " This is a most transcendental precedent, " says Alberto Szekely, a Mexico > > City lawyer and career Mexican diplomat who is representing the coalition > of > > environmentalists opposed to the San Ignacio project. " The future of > > environmental justice will depend on (it). " > > > > The proposed saltworks would occupy 116 square miles of natural salt flats > > at the head of the San Ignacio Lagoon. The lagoon is part of a whale > > sanctuary declared by the Mexican government in the 1970s and, as such, is > a > > legally protected area. > > > > The lagoon and a surrounding swath of central Baja are included in the > > Vizcaino Biosphere Reserve, the largest in Latin America. The biosphere is > > home to bighorn sheep and a host of other endangered or " threatened " > animals > > and plants. > > > > " That should mean something, " says Mark Spalding, a professor of > > international environmental law in San Diego who is advising the > > International Fund for Animal Welfare and the National Resources Defense > > Council, the two U.S. organizations that are largely bankrolling the > > opposition to the saltworks. > > > > " Does that just go away because someone wants to invest and create a few > > hundred jobs? The big picture here is environmental policy, " Spalding > says. > > " Even if the saltworks by itself had no impact directly, we still have to > > answer the question of what are the indirect impacts. " > > > > Spalding and other environmentalists liken the current effort to stop the > > saltworks at San Ignacio to the binational opposition against the planned > > nuclear waste disposal site at Sierra Blanca, in the borderlands of West > > Texas. The dump proposal was scrapped last year after bitter debate. > > > > Although environmentalists seek to protect dozens of animal and plant > > species by halting the saltworks, the whale is their most formidable > weapon. > > > > " The gray whale is the animal superstar of Mexico, " says Serge Dedina, a > > University of Arizona geographer who published a book this year on San > > Ignacio. " There is no other animal that has generated as much support. " > > > > ESSA has a facility near the village of Guerrero Negro, about 85 miles > north > > of San Ignacio, where it produces salt by pumping sea water into large and > > very shallow holding tanks in the table-flat desert. > > > > As the sea water evaporates in the desert sun and wind, the increasingly > > saline residue is pumped into ever shallower ponds until, finally, a thick > > crust of salt and a solution of brine remains. The salt is collected by > > large machines akin to road graders, cleaned and loaded on vessels for > > export. > > > > Although it accounts for only 4 percent of world salt production, the > > Guerrero Negro facility is the largest saltworks in the world. About 80 > > percent of the 7 million tons of salt that ESSA produces annually at > > Guerrero Negro is exported, much of it to Japan. The salt, which is mostly > > used in industry, generates about $80 million in revenues each year for > > ESSA. > > > > Because ocean-going freighters cannot dock in the shallow waters at > Guerrero > > Negro, the salt produced there has to first be sent by barge to a nearby > > island for loading on the vessels. > > > > Once fully operational in 10 to 20 years, the San Ignacio facility would > > produce about the same amount of salt as Guerrero Negro does now, company > > officials say. > > > > They say the San Ignacio works would dramatically lower costs because > > ocean-going ships could load at a nearby pier. > > > > While such salt production is a largely natural process, environmentalists > > say the noise of the extraction pumps and the brine residue that is > returned > > to the sea have a detrimental impact on the whales and other sea life. > They > > blame brine contamination for the deaths last year of endangered sea > turtles > > near Guerrero Negro. > > > > Company officials point out that nothing grows on the salt flats near the > > lagoon now and say that the evaporation ponds in Guerrero Negro attract > > waves of wading birds and other wildlife. > > > > To reduce noise levels, ESSA proposes to use electric pumps at San Ignacio > > instead of the diesel pumps employed at Guerrero Negro. The salt produced > at > > the new facility would be loaded onto ships from a milelong pier near the > > village of Punta Abreojos, which is outside the lagoon. > > > > But environmentalist say the saltworks' evaporation ponds could alter the > > flow of rainwater runoff into the bay. And local fishermen fear that > pumping > > large quantities of water from the lagoon would alter its ecosystem. They > > also complain that the pier would be built atop prime lobster and abalone > > fishing beds. > > > > Both the company and the environmentalists have produced conflicting > studies > > on the project's impact, with prominent scientists from the Scripps > > Institute in San Diego hired by the company concluding that the operation > > would pose no threat to the whales. > > > > The growing whale population in the lagoons surrounding Guerrero Negro, > > where salt has been produced since the late 1950s, would seem to bolster > > that argument. > > > > " I have never seen a whale harmed by the saltworks, " says Juan Lopez, who > > works as a whale-watching guide at Ojo de Liebre Lagoon, which is > surrounded > > by the Guerrero Negro saltworks. " If the salt affects them, then why are > > they coming here more than any other place? " > > > > Local opponents of the San Ignacio project say that the fate of the > whales, > > although used to rally public support in Mexico and abroad, is not the > only > > issue. > > > > " Maybe the whales won't be so affected by the saltworks, " says Manuel > > Gardea, a university-trained fisheries expert who is a member of a > > cooperative that fishes the San Ignacio lagoon and runs a tourist camp > > during whale-watching season. " But (the saltworks) will change the > > atmosphere here completely. " > > > > To remind them of what they fear most, environmentalists and San Ignacio > > Lagoon residents look to Guerrero Negro. > > > > Raw and ugly, the town looks like mining communities the world over. A > > single paved street connects ESSA's offices and houses to the main > highway, > > which cuts north through the desert to the U.S. border at Tijuana. Since > > salt production began here 43 years ago, Guerrero Negro's population has > > burgeoned from a few hundred souls to more than 13,000 people. > > > > Many of the ESSA employees and their families live in small houses > arranged > > in neat blocks near the headquarters offices. A company store sits across > > from the main gate of the saltworks. > > > > But the rest of the population lives in thrown-together houses that line > the > > town's dusty and rubble-strewn side streets. Small groceries, cheap > hotels, > > seedy bars and other businesses crowd the main street. > > > > Workers from the saltworks, their clothes worn and their faces lined by > the > > desert sun, share the sidewalks with eco-tourists and U.S. senior citizens > > who arrive in recreational vehicles. > > > > Like most Baja California communities, Guerrero Negro announces itself > miles > > outside town by the litter that lines the highway. Scattered by the desert > > winds, plastic bags hang in the cactuses, brush and low trees. Paper, soda > > cans and plastic bottles pepper the roadsides. > > > > In contrast, Punta Abreojos, where the San Ignacio saltworks would be > > headquartered, is a sleepy village of humble houses and stores that hasn't > > changed much since its founding 52 years ago. The town hugs a small cape > at > > the end of a 65-mile-long unpaved road, whose rocks and ruts challenge > even > > the sturdiest vehicles. > > > > Most of Punta Abreojos' 1,000 residents belong to a handful of extended > > families. People don't lock their doors. The town's fishermen leave all > > their tackle, including expensive radio gear, in their boats overnight > with > > little concern about thievery. > > > > " There will be more money, but also more crime and more vice, " says Marcos > > Parra, the beefy 44-year-old owner of a small general store across the > > street from the beach where the village fishing boats are docked. > > " Everything will change here. That's what progress brings. " > > > > To persuade local residents to support the San Ignacio saltworks, ESSA has > > promised to improve the village's quality of life by spending large sums > on > > local schools, roads and other public works. Company executives claim that > > more than 200 jobs, many of them going to locals, would be created. > > > > Steady jobs and better schools prove a sore temptation to some who live > > along the shores of the San Ignacio Lagoon. > > > > " A lot of people here want the project, " says Gloria Rousseau, who owns a > > small general store on one of Punta Abreojo's two main streets. " People > are > > going to benefit. There will be a lot of work. People here don't care so > > much about the whales, because they don't make money off of them. " > > > > But leaders of the Punta Abreojos fishing cooperative complain that the > > economic advantage of the saltworks for the village will be more than > offset > > by the potential damage to the local fishing areas. > > > > " What good are all of those things if we don't have the products that our > > families have lived off of for 50 years? " asks Jorge Solorio, 41, the > > cooperative's president, of ESSA's promises of plenty. > > > > " We see the whole thing as very risky, " Solorio says. " We know it is going > > to affect us. " > > > > For now, the fishermen at Punta Abreojos and those all along the shore of > > the San Ignacio Lagoon see the environmentalists as their best hope for > > stopping the project. But their alliance with outsiders, especially U.S. > > groups, makes them increasingly uneasy. > > > > " We aren't foolish. We know that they are using us as a banner, " says > Manuel > > Gardea, the fisheries expert. > > > > " But we have a common final objective. We all don't want this project. But > > for us, the final objectives is that the resources be exploited properly. " > > > > > > Fair Use Notice: This document may contain copyrighted material the use of > > which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owners. > > Copyright material may only be used for not-for-profit, educational use on > > the Web which constitutes a fair use of the material (ie. as provided for > in > > section 107 of the US Copyright Law). If you use copyright material for > > purposes that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the > owner. > > > > > > > > > > Gray whales with Winston > > http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/Jungle/1953/index.html > > Save the Whales > > http://www.homestead.com/savethewhales/index.html > > > > > \=========================================================================/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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