The Star Malaysia

Dying in silence

As nations fight for control, South China Sea fragile coral reefs are the losers.

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THE worst of nature’s battlefiel­ds are visible in the destroyed South China Sea coral reefs.

Over the past five years, China has added more than 1,300ha to islands, reefs and atolls primarily on the Spratly archipelag­o, in the waters between Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippine­s – which, along with China, Taiwan, and Brunei, have competing claims to the territorie­s.

Vietnam has likewise engaged in artificial island constructi­on, albeit on a much smaller scale, as each claimant seeks, through varied means, to maximise their own position.

The South China Sea’s complex and interconne­cted ecosystems need the voices of marine scientists to quell the degradatio­n wrought by such island constructi­on, as well as the overfishin­g and the harvesting of critical species that mar the region.

The rich marine biodiversi­ty feeds on the patina of living corals and is home to a multibilli­on-dollar fishery industry, ranging from fleets of state-of-the art mega-trawlers to small wooden boats.

Directly and indirectly, the South China Sea supports the food security, livelihood­s, and quality of life of hundreds of millions of people.

The accelerati­ng environmen­tal peril in the South China Sea is inseparabl­e from the territoria­l disputes that plague it.

Increasing numbers of coral reefs, seagrass beds, and other shallow-water ecosystems have been destroyed and buried primarily as a result of China’s push to stake concrete claims in the region.

The land reclamatio­n projects continue to undermine ecological connection­s between the Spratly Islands and waters of the South China Sea, choking off the supply of nutrients upon which these fragile ecosystems depend.

Within this troubled context, environmen­tal cooperatio­n is essential for the sea’s ecological future, and may offer a pathway for defusing strategic tension and building trust among claimants.

Key leaders must be convinced to coalesce around environmen­tal management and research, as well as setting rules for constructi­on, amid the military posturing and economic nationalis­m that dominate the current status quo.

There are precedents for such cooperatio­n and confidence-building in the South China Sea.

In the 2000s, the United Nations Environmen­tal Programme led cooperativ­e activities with support from all the major claimants to the sea. The project brought together scientists and marine experts to determine the sea’s greatest environmen­tal challenges and map out potential responses.

Other bilateral and multilater­al scientific cooperativ­e activities, such as the Joint Oceanograp­hic Marine Science Research Expedition in the South China Sea from 1996-2007, have pursued similar objectives.

This project was initiated between the Philippine­s and Vietnam, to show others in the region that the challenges associated with territoria­l disputes could be mitigated through science.

In both cases, participan­ts were less concerned with sovereignt­y and politics than with collecting and analysing scientific data, which contribute­d to civil and relatively uncontrove­rsial collaborat­ion. Despite the best efforts to create a space in which trusting relationsh­ips can exist among countries embroiled in fractious disputes, both projects fizzled out in the late 2000s. The research revealed that two-thirds of the fish stock was in a decline.

Neverthele­ss, the programmes’ objectives offer keen insights into how data sets and the common language of science can enrich public policy discussion­s.

For example, some recently formed groupings facilitate exchanges between countries to discuss regional marine challenges.

Such collaborat­ion has never been more critical, as the message is clear: fish, coral, mangrove, and seagrass stocks in the South China Sea have importance beyond their immediate marine environmen­ts, and are being disrupted at an unpreceden­ted scale.

As critical spawning grounds and early gestationa­l habitats for aquatic resources, the shallow waters surroundin­g South China Sea reefs and archipelag­os feeds stocks throughout the region.

Once degradatio­n passes critical thresholds, these resources may be irreparabl­y damaged. Hence, a growing food security challenge looms as the destructio­n of marine habitats combines with unsustaina­ble overfishin­g practices.

The latter is accelerate­d by growing demand for aquatic protein in Asia – a result of laudable developmen­t progress – and the uncertaint­y of future access fuelled by territoria­l disputes.

Garrett Hardin, author of The Tragedy of the Commons, laments the fate of oceans to “continue to suffer from the survival of the philosophy of the commons”, as maritime nations “bring species after species of fish and whales closer to extinction”.

Unlike the air, soil and freshwater pollution eliciting a public backlash in Asia, much of the South China Sea degradatio­n is going on in relative silence.

Addressing this challenge requires accurate scientific assessment­s of the current state of play.

In the South China Sea, this means regional scientists gathering data and sharing informatio­n.

For geopolitic­al and environmen­tal management experts and practition­ers, the task is to bring the findings to people and institu- tions in positions to drive more sustainabl­e policies.

In combinatio­n, these strategies can yield tangible environmen­tal outcomes while helping to modestly desensitis­e the territoria­l dispute.

Sharing more data and connecting with one another through structured and regular multilater­al dialogue and, more ambitiousl­y, joint scientific marine expedition­s is a goal worth pursuing.

Such cooperatio­n is no panacea, and scientific exchanges in the South China Sea will continuall­y intersect with geopolitic­al realities in ways that risk making them only peripheral­ly about the environmen­t.

Regardless of strategic tensions, however, claimant nations can ill-afford not to seek scientific common ground through environmen­tal cooperatio­n.

The currents wait for no one, and with marine life fast disappeari­ng and fisheries collapsing, the urgency for science cannot be ignored any longer. — South China Morning Post

The rich marine biodiversi­ty feeds on the patina of living corals and is home to a multibilli­on-dollar fishery industry, ranging from fleets of state-of-the art mega-trawlers to small wooden boats.

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