The New Zealand Herald

Heading into abyss of pollution and waste

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councils should set public goals and play on our sense of Kiwi pride to keep us truly clean and green.

Make dredging illegal, move commercial fishing way offshore and don’t be bullied by the fishing industry crying out that its exports “benefit the nation”.

Not as much their fishing methods and couldn’t-care-less approach damages the country.

Wrecking and killing everything in their trawling, dredging, purse seining path, the commercial fishing industry has destroyed much of the sea floor eco-systems around the country’s shorelines and some kilometres beyond. This has to stop. Our fish quota system has been lauded for conserving fish stocks. But it’s a lie.

A fisherman hauls up his net and throws scores of different species back — dead — keeping only what his quota allows. Half the time he’s wrecked the sea floor. The fish quota is sold overseas; the fisherman has acted within the law.

But not for a moment in the spirit. Tens of thousands of tonnes of dead, discarded fish is madness by any other name. Push commercial fishers at least 30km offshore, buy back good chunks of their quota and never sell them again.

Recreation­al fishers must accept lower catch quotas. Yep, that’s you and your boat with your mates and beer cans hauling up snapper and posting your proud catches on Facebook.

Come home a bit sooner, with a lot fewer fish. Save your smiles for your country, not yourself.

Clay run-off from house building should be subject to heavy fines. All well and good ACC spending a million and a half bucks on a state house replica in the name of art. Meanwhile, its “windows” look out over a harbour that is getting more polluted while councils stay silent.

Ten polluted Auckland beaches have been deemed unsafe for swimming. Clean and green New Zealand, eh?

Mean, short-sighted and selfish a better descriptio­n. Not recycling is polluting.

Further afield, the dairy farming industry has polluted virtually every stream and creek and countless lakes in the country. It has to stop before it’s too late.

If our precious rugby game was under similar threat the problem would be fixed pretty damn quickly. Well, this problem is more important than rugby.

Where are the hoardings exhorting us on how not to pollute, how and what to recycle?

Why no television/radio campaigns funded by government giving a relentless message that polluting is akin to murdering. Recycling should be made compulsory for everyone.

Private and business activities should have ethical standards set.

Auckland City Council must lead from the front by waging an intense programme educating us on how each can help lessen the effects of pollution and abuse of our land, waters and air.

If we need a reminder of ignoring the problem of short-sighted thinking, look at Japan, consumers of 80 per cent of the world’s bluefin tuna catch. That resource is now down by 97 per cent from its peak.

Do we have to wait for such a disaster before we learn?

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