Saemangeum
- a vital wetland: 2
The stated aims of this reclamation project are both to increase
national territory and to create more land for rice culture. The
tidal-flats are, of course, already part of South Korea territory,
and whilst food production and security is vital to any nation,
a shift in national diet away from rice, combined with advances
in rice-growing technology, has led to a massive annual rice surplus
in South Korea since 1996. (The surplus, twice that advised by
the Food and Agriculture Organisation, even threatens a rice price
collapse.) Informed commentators confidently identify that regional
politics (the incumbent president, Kim-Dae Jung, was born in a
neighboring province) remains the real factor behind the drive
for this project.
Progress of the Saemangeum 'reclamation' has not been smooth,
with significant financial and time overruns. Initially dreamt
up by the military government of the 1980s (as part of a comprehensive
Master Land Use Plan targeting 90% of all remaining inter-tidal
wetland and shallows for reclamation) construction costs had already
exceeded the original price estimate, with 2.3 billion dollars
spent by 2001, and anticipated future costs many times higher still.
The whole project was even temporarily suspended in 2000 to allow
for some further research on possible environmental impacts by
an expert panel. After a year of intense review the panel concluded
that this project would inevitably produce significant environmental
problems, including increased water pollution, declines in fisheries
and impacts on other wildlife. The majority of the panel therefore
called for the project's cancellation. Ignoring their calls, and
after a series of delayed announcements, the government announced
simply on 25 May 2001 that the Saemangeum reclamation was to restart
in 'an environmentally friendly way' (government spokesperson,
'Korea Herald', 26 May 2001).
Despite a number of recent positive shifts in policy and initiatives
pursued especially by the Ministry of Environment (including a
UNDP-GEF Wetlands Biodiversity project still in the development
phase) the government of South Korea still avoids the issue of
loss of biodiversity through reclamation, instead insisting (1)
that it is too late to turn the project back, (2) that local people
want the development and (3) that the only environmental issue
remains maintenance of adequate water quality in the barrage lakes
to allow for eventual irrigation of the rice-fields. In line with
other such projects, there will be no compensation offered beyond
one-off payments to fishing communities for the loss of their fishing
rights, and no significant modification of the design. The regional
fisheries industry, which both supplies a multitude of 'products'
ranging from seaweeds through shellfish and crabs to fish, and
forms the cultural core for many small coastal communities, is
already in significant decline - a situation that will be severely
worsened by the conversion of many harvested species' egg-laying
and nursery areas into rice-field.
Is there hope for the future? The plight of the wider Yellow Sea
has until very recently been largely overlooked by the international
conservation community and ignored by international media. However,
WWF-International has now identified the Yellow Sea as one of its
Global 200 eco-regions, and Birdlife International is also in the
process of drawing up a list of Important Bird Areas within the
Sea. (5) BBC World radio and Earth Report have started the process
of exposing the Saemangeum issue, and there is now adequate information
about the wetland on websites and in some conservation-oriented
publications to help better inform opinion.
Within South Korea itself, Kim Dae-jung's presidency (his image
seriously dented by a series of financial scandals) comes to an
end in February 2003, and with this change the possibility of cancellation
again increases. President-elect Roh, although not apparently mentioning
environmental legislation at all during his election campaign,
is already establishing a reputation for challenging corrupt money
politics and for increasing government transparency. Mindful of
several failed and extremely destructive reclamation projects (most
notably Shihwa, where plans to use reclaimed land for agriculture
had to be given up due to poor design and extreme pollution problems)
the Saemangeum reclamation also continues to be opposed by the
majority of Korean people, by all the country's environmental groups,
apparently by the two main Ministries responsible for wetland conservation
in South Korea (the Ministry of Environment and the Ministry of
Maritime Affairs and Fisheries), and by a significant number of
international NGOs outside of Korea. Wetlands International, Birdlife
International, the RSPB and Friends of the Earth International
have all sent letters of protest against the project.
With so little time left before the outer dyke is completed, it
is essential that leading NGOs and concerned individuals do not
give up the fight for Saemangeum. South Korea, a nation that has
achieved miraculous growth and development over the past few decades,
remains both open to change and improvement, and is sensitive to
international criticism. Letters sent to Korean embassies in home
countries, to relevant media (including English language newspapers
in Korea), and to officials responsible for environmental policy
in their own countries as well as to the office of the new president
will continue to encourage domestic opposition to the project,
and empower sections of society, business and government to again
demand for the project to be stopped. With heightened awareness
and a new president, there must still be hope for Saemangeum and
its enormously important biodiversity.
References
- Moores, N. et al. (a 2001) Yellow Sea Ecoregion: Reconnaissance
Report on Identification of Important Wetland and Marine Areas
for Biodiversity. Volume 2: South Korea. Joint publication of
WWF-Japan, Wetlands & Birds Korea, and Wetlands International
China Program.
- Barter, M. (2002) Shorebirds in the Yellow Sea. Importance,
Threats, and Conservation Status (AWSG: in press)
- Moores, N. (b 2001) Internationally Significant Wetlands to
be 100% Reclaimed. WWF Arctic Bulletin (3) 12-13.
- Asia-Pacific Migratory Waterbird Conservation Committee (2001)
Asia-Pacific Migratory Waterbird Conservation Strategy: 2001-2005.
Wetlands International-Asia Pacific. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
- Anon (2003). A strategy for Threatened Birds in Asia, to be
published by the Birdlife Asia partnership in June 2003.
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