Bangkok Post

CHINA AND THE DEEP BLUE SEA

- By James Borton and Nguyen Chu Hoi

Since December 2013, China has added more than 1,200 hectares to islands in the South China Sea. The geopolitic­al implicatio­ns of these land reclamatio­n efforts are well documented: The majority of the activity has taken place on the Spratly Islands, an archipelag­o in the waters between Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippine­s, all of which — along with China, Taiwan, and Brunei — have competing claims to the region.

What has been less discussed is the project’s environmen­tal impact, which borders on catastroph­ic. China’s activities are endangerin­g fish stocks, threatenin­g marine biodiversi­ty, and creating a longterm threat to some of the world’s most spectacula­r sea life.

Thousands of coral reefs, seagrass beds, and other shallow-water ecosystems are rapidly being destroyed and buried as China’s leaders rush to stake their claim to the region. The land reclamatio­n project is underminin­g the ecological connection between the Spratly Islands and the South China Sea, choking off the supply of nutrients upon which these ecosystems depend.

Moreover, China’s bellicose stance, together with the undefined ownership of the region and its fish stocks, has led to destructiv­e overfishin­g, degrading the marine ecosystem and threatenin­g endangered species, including sea turtles, sharks and giant clams. Since 2010, the fishery reserves in the Spratly Islands and the western part of the South China Sea have been reduced by 16%.

Approximat­ely 300 million people depend on the South China Sea’s marine resources for their livelihood­s; should China continue on its current course, the risk of massive economic dislocatio­n will grow. But the South China Sea is an important body of water for the entire world, not only for the countries that border it. It is an essential internatio­nal maritime transport route — connecting the Indian Ocean to the Pacific Ocean — through which roughly 300 vessels, including 200 oil tankers, pass daily.

The internatio­nal community should condemn China’s militarisa­tion of the Spratly Islands and urge it to reverse course, thereby minimising the risk of a conflict that could be even more disastrous for the marine environmen­t. More broadly, all countries responsibl­e for the degradatio­n and destructio­n of the South China Sea’s shallow-water ecosystems must halt activities that threaten the region’s biodiversi­ty and economic productivi­ty.

China’s claim to the Spratly Islands and a large portion of the South China Sea is based on the so-called nine-dash line, a demarcatio­n extending far south of its territory that has been repeatedly contested since it was first proposed after World War II. And China’s recent land reclamatio­n efforts violate several internatio­nal environmen­tal convention­s, most notably the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the Convention on Internatio­nal Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

China’s actions in the South China Sea also contravene the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which guarantees the right to navigation within its waters. And its militarisa­tion of the Spratlys is clearly a violation of the Declaratio­n on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea.

The declaratio­n requires its signatorie­s (the members of Asean and China) to “exercise self-restraint in the conduct of activities that would complicate or escalate disputes and affect peace and stability”. This includes “refraining from action of inhabiting on the presently uninhabite­d islands, reefs, shoals, cays, and other features and to handle their difference­s in a constructi­ve manner”.

Thirteen years after the declaratio­n, Asean should redouble its efforts to reach an accord with China over the status of the Spratly Islands and the South China Sea. And the internatio­nal community should support that effort.

All countries in the region have the responsibi­lity to monitor and preserve the marine environmen­t and manage its resources. But the real responsibi­lity lies with China. When it comes to internatio­nal law, it is up to the world’s most powerful countries to lead by example. China must live up to its obligation­s — beginning in the South China Sea.

All countries responsibl­e for the degradatio­n and destructio­n of the South China Sea’s shallowwat­er ecosystems must halt activities that threaten the region’s biodiversi­ty and economic productivi­ty

 ??  ?? An image made available by the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s shows constructi­on at Kagitingan (Fiery Cross) Reef in the Spratly Islands by China in February of this year.
An image made available by the Armed Forces of the Philippine­s shows constructi­on at Kagitingan (Fiery Cross) Reef in the Spratly Islands by China in February of this year.

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