Category Culture

Finding Space for All in Our Crowded Seas 0

The ocean is getting crowded: Fishermen are competing with offshore wind projects, oil rigs along with sand miners, recreational boaters, liquefied gas tankers and fish farmers. So a growing number of groups — including policymakers, academics, activists and industry officials — now say it’s time to divvy up space in the sea.

“We’ve got competition for space in the ocean, just like we have competition for space on land,” said Andrew Rosenberg, a natural resources and environment professor at the University of New Hampshire who has advised Massachusetts on the issue. “How are you going to manage it? Is it the people with the most power win? Is it whoever got there first? Is it a free-for-all?”

To resolve these conflicts, a handful of states — including Massachusetts, California and Rhode Island — have begun essentially zoning the ocean, drawing up rules and procedures to determine which activities can take place and where. The federal government is considering adopting a similar approach, though any coherent effort would involve sorting out the role of 20 agencies that administer roughly 140 ocean-related laws.

“It’s really an idea whose time has come, and it’s one of my top priorities,” said Jane Lubchenco, who chairs the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “By focusing on different sectors, nobody is paying attention to the whole — in particular, the health of the system.”

But conducting what experts call “marine spatial planning” presents scientific and political challenges, since so little of the ocean has been mapped in detail, and so many interest groups want to use it. The federal government has mapped only 20 percent of the “exclusive economic zone” that stretches from the U.S. coast out 200 nautical miles, and that’s just its geophysical bottom, not the habitats and species that exist at varying levels.

Charlie Wahle, a senior scientist in NOAA’s National Marine Protected Area Center, said the agency is convening experts in California to chart how groups including kayakers, the Coast Guard and fishermen use waters off the state’s coast. “People have been surprisingly willing to engage and share their information and knowledge of the way it really is, as opposed to how it may look on maps,” he said. “We’re on the right path, but it’s not a simple thing.”

Marine ecologist Larry Crowder, one of several scientists at Duke University who have compiled data for such plans, said the approach makes sense because ocean resources are not “equally distributed, whether it’s oil and gas, or fish, or corals.” But he added that the sea has so many overlapping activities that “when you begin putting these maps together, as we’ve done, it quickly becomes a train wreck.”

The states pioneering this approach have charted different paths. California is establishing marine protected areas along its 1,100-mile coastline under its 1999 Marine Life Protection Act, dividing it into five regions and brokering agreements with interest groups. Massachusetts, which enacted its Ocean Act only last year, is to finalize a comprehensive ocean management plan by Jan. 1 that exempts fisheries but covers all other major activities.

Ian Bowles, Massachusetts secretary of energy and environmental affairs, said the state is working to determine “what are the areas of particular ecological value that we should be protecting from other uses” and what parts of the ocean can accommodate such diverse concerns as liquefied natural gas offloading terminals, wind projects and sand mining for restoring eroding beaches.

While a few states are leading the way in the United States, the Europeans and Australians have done this for years. Charles Ehler, a Paris-based consultant who is drafting a manual on the subject for UNESCO, the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, said the demand for offshore wind farms and other activities has spurred countries such as Belgium, Germany, Norway and the Netherlands to establish specific marine boundaries.

“There’s a much greater intensity of demand for offshore space in Europe than in most of the United States,” said Ehler, noting Belgium’s demand exceeds its available space by 200 to 300 percent.

Even though they have a head start, policymakers overseas are struggling with many of the same questions Americans are contemplating, including how to reconcile new and traditional ocean uses, and how climate change will affect where marine species live. With the exception of Norway, few nations have been willing to subject fisheries to the same management regime as such activities as renewable energy and gravel mining.

“The traditional users of the sea have been the most resistant to marine spatial planning, because they’ve pretty much been free to go where they want to go and do what they want to do,” Ehler said.

While California includes the fishing industry in its planning process, Massachusetts fishermen held up passage of the state’s Ocean Act until they were reassured they would be exempt. “We don’t want to be told, ‘Oh, and this place — you can’t go here anymore,’ because we were there all along,” said Bill Adler, executive director of the Massachusetts Lobstermen’s Association. He added that the fishing industry is already regulated separately by the state.

Some U.S. oil and gas executives have adopted a similar stance, arguing that any offshore drilling projects must undergo a federal environmental assessment. “I don’t think the overall process is broken,” said Marvin Odum, president of Shell Oil Co., adding that when he hears of calls for additional ecological reviews, “From where I sit, some of it can just look like delay tactics.”

But as the country appears poised for a new push in offshore oil drilling, advocates such as the Ocean Conservancy’s Vikki Spruill argue it needs to take a more serious look at how it coordinates activities off its coasts. “We wouldn’t put a coal plant in a national park,” Spruill said. Philippe Cousteau, president of the nonprofit EarthEcho International, said policymakers should put environmental considerations “first and foremost” when deciding where to locate new drilling activities.

Mary Gleason, the Nature Conservancy’s senior scientist and lead planner for marine protected areas in California’s central and north central coastal regions, said “there’s a lot of drama” when the universe of users is included in ocean planning. “There’s been a negotiated solution in all of these cases, where there’s been a lot of give-and-take,” she said.

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Dick Baker Memorial Paddle Out – Sunday 0

Paddle Outs

SIMA & friends of Dick Baker host memorial paddle out

The SIMA and surf industry families are deeply saddened by the recent passing of SIMA’s longtime president, leader and guiding light, Dick Baker, after his two-year battle with cancer. The family appreciates the outpouring of love and support that have been expressed.  A public Paddle Out has been planned in Dick’s honor.  Please find the details below:

PADDLE OUT SERVICE IN MEMORY OF DICK BAKER

WHEN:
Sunday, May 31 –  3:00 p.m.

WHERE:
Doheny State Park
Picnic Areas A and B (map attached)

The service will begin in Picnic Area A and will include a traditional Paddle Out service in the water. Following the service, attendees are invited to surf Doheny and picnic in areas A and B, which are covered. Please bring your own beverages and food. Hawaiian singers and musicians will entertain. Festivities will continue until approximately two hours after the Paddle Out concludes.

DRIVING DIRECTIONS:
From San Diego:
I-5 North to Beach Cities exit
Once on exit ramp, bear left to Pacific Coast Highway North to Dana Point
Turn left at Dana Point Harbour Drive and make first left into Doheny State Park.  Ranger will provide directions.

From Orange County:
I-5 South exit Pacific Coast Highway North to Dana Point
Turn left at Dana Point Harbour Drive and make first left into Doheny State Park.  Ranger will provide directions.

ADDITIONAL DETAILS:
Parking on-site, and we suggest arriving early. San Onofre and California State Park parking passes are accepted, otherwise there is a standard parking fee of $10.  Please bring your own surfboard, towel, wetsuit (water temp approx 65 degrees), cooler and drinks (alcohol permitted).  Flowers will be provided for Paddle Out participants.

SENDING CONDOLENCES TO THE BAKER FAMILY:
In lieu of flowers, the Baker family appreciates any donations to be made to one of the following foundations in Dick’s honor:

•   SIMA Environmental Fund  http://www.sima.com/charitable-funds/environmental-fund.aspx
Checks should be made payable to the SIMA Environmental Fund and mailed to:
SIMA Environmental Fund – Dick Baker Remembrance
8 Argonaut, Ste. 170, Aliso Viejo, CA  92656

•  SIMA Humanitarian Fund http://www.sima.com/charitable-funds/humanitarian-fund.aspx
Checks should be made payable to the SIMA Humanitarian Fund and mailed to:
SIMA Humanitarian Fund – Dick Baker Remembrance
8 Argonaut, Ste. 170, Aliso Viejo, CA  92656

•   The San Clemente Educational Foundation
Donate online using the link above, or checks should be made payable to San Clemente Educational Foundation and mailed to:
San Clemente High School
P.O. Box 4538, San Clemente, CA  92674

Cards should be mailed to:
The Baker Family
c/o SIMA
8 Argonaut, Suite 170
Aliso Viejo, CA  92656

Again, please direct any questions or inquiries to the SIMA office.

SIMA – Surf Industry Manufacturers Association
8 Argonaut, Ste. 170
Aliso Viejo, CA  92656
Ph: 949.366.1164
Fax: 949.454.1406

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Vote For The Worlds Best Surfer 0

World Pro Surfers All Star event

The world’s best—voted on by you – will be competing at the Hurley US Open of Surfing

Have you ever felt deprived as a surf fan? Felt like the Dream Tour is great and all, but wish we could personally inspire a little more magic from our favorite surfers?

Well, come this July at the Hurley US Open of Surfing, those wishes will be granted. It’s called the World Professional Surfers All-Star event, where the fans finally get to decide who they want to see perform.  The concept is simple. World Professional Surfers (WPS), the union that works on behalf of the ASP’s touring professionals, helped hatch an event that is our equivalent to the Home Run Derby or the Slam Dunk Contest.

The fans vote, the top 10 surfers are announced and then those surfers attend the Open at Huntington Beach, surf in the six-star, get proper recognition on stage and also compete in a PWC-assisted expression session that has to be seen to be believed.

Right now, four former world champions are guaranteed All Stars: Kelly Slater, Andy Irons, Mick Fanning and CJ Hobgood. The six remaining All Stars are entirely up to you. Just go to the World Professional Surfers site, pick your favorite surfer and cast your vote.

Then watch the magic happen in July knowing you had a hand in it.

Voting ends June 15. Check out the voting webpage

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