Oceana’s proposals to put a stop to the seafood contamination

Mercury pollution poses a very serious threat to our environment and to public health.  The purpose of Oceana’s international Seafood Contamination Campaign in Europe is to raise public awareness of the health effects of mercury-contaminated seafood and reduce a major source of the mercury pollution that eventually contaminates fish—the few remaining chlorine factories using outdated, mercury-cell technology. A principal cause of mercury-poisoned fish is the remaining chlor-alkali plants that use mercury-cell technology in making chlorine. 

Mercury pollution is a severe problem in Europe:  there are 53 mercury cell chlorine plants currently operating in European Union (EU) territory.  Although there has been a move within the EU to ban this type of production by 2007, there is stiff opposition to such a ban and opponents are pushing to extend the deadline to 2010 or even later.  

Oceana has asked the EU to maintain the 2007 deadline for the elimination of the obsolete mercury cell technology in chlorine-alkaline plants and to put a similar programme to the one used by the United States into operation, by 2008, in order to put an end to one of the leading sources of mercury pollution.

 

 

A DOCUMENTARY ABOUT ILLEGAL DRIFTNETS

Oceana in the documentary made by the producer EarthOcean about illegal drifnetters in the Mediterranean Sea. The video includes an interview with Xavier Pastor, Oceana’s Director for Europe, and also images of illegal driftnetters recorded during the expeditions on board the catamaran Oceana Ranger. Driftnets are banned since 2002 because they represent a major threat for the conservation of endangered species such as marine turtles and cetaceans.

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