Stabroek News

Environmen­talist calls on FAO to release study on fish catch

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Environmen­talist Simone Mangal-Joly has written to the Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on (FAO) calling on it to release a study which purports to say that Guyana’s oil and gas industry is not causing the low fish catch being experience­d by fishermen here.

In a letter yesterday to Julio Berdeague, Assistant Director General of the FAO, Mangal-Joly cites a May 22, 2022 Demerara Waves article: “Oil industry not responsibl­e for low fish catch – FAO study” where it was reported that Minister of Agricultur­e Zulfikar Mustapha had stated that offshore oil and gas activities have not played a role in the decline of the fish catch. The letter said that the report attributed this conclusion to a United Nations’ FAO study, and further stated that the public can confirm this with the FAO.

Mangal-Joly wrote in her letter that the FAO must be aware that the impact of offshore oil and gas activities is the subject of much debate and that the major operator offshore, ExxonMobil, has now been given four environmen­tal permits for production and numerous other environmen­tal permits for seismic studies without either the Government of Guyana or Exxon Mobil providing any study data on the location of valuable environmen­tal receptors, such as reefs and fish nurseries, in relation to ExxonMobil’s installati­ons, effluent outflows, ocean currents, and commercial and subsistenc­e fishing grounds.

“There is no evidence whatsoever that a comprehens­ive commodity chain assessment or quantifica­tion of the value of Guyana’s subsistenc­e and commercial fisheries sector has ever been conducted. There is no evidence that a Catch Per Unit Effort study has ever been conducted to support conclusion­s drawn from offtake data on the state of fish stocks. There is also no evidence whatsoever that the Environmen­tal Protection Agency is monitoring and enforcing any requiremen­ts for discharge standards and other environmen­tal provisions in the permits that Exxon Mobil enjoy”, Mangal-Joly said. Further, she contended that there is no evidence of offshore longitudin­al research studies in place to track changes in Guyana’s fish and marine resources.

Just recently on March 31, 2022, she contended that the Environmen­tal Protection Agency violated the Environmen­tal Protection Act by granting the Yellowtail Project Environmen­tal Permit, in which the Agency asked ExxonMobil to study the likelihood of its own impact on fisheries.

“This is an assessment that ought to have been

conducted as part of the Environmen­tal Impact Assessment process and the findings used as a criterion for the Agency’s decision on whether a permit should have been granted. The mere fact that this

Government Agency asked a private company to undertake the assessment task, and has failed for five years to provide any monitoring and evaluation reports on offshore practices, signals that it had no credible research informatio­n regarding the impacts of offshore oil and gas activities on Guyana’s fisheries sector, nor was it expecting such informatio­n from a third party at the time that it granted the permit”, Mangal-Joly wrote.

She requested that the FAO immediatel­y and publicly address the matter of

whether it has credible conclusion­s on offshore oil and gas impacts on fisheries and release the study to which Mustapha refers with all supporting datasets.

“By providing this informatio­n, the public will be assured of the FAO’s comprehens­iveness and neutrality, and the FAO will be able to maintain its image of respectabi­lity that the Guyanese People and indeed the People of the Caribbean deserve of a public agency”, MangalJoly said.

 ?? ?? Julio Berdeague (right) with Minister of Agricultur­e Zulfikar Mustapha during the agricultur­e conference held last week by the government. (Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Co-operation photo)
Julio Berdeague (right) with Minister of Agricultur­e Zulfikar Mustapha during the agricultur­e conference held last week by the government. (Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Co-operation photo)

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