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    Chinese ship waste endangering reefs

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    Date
    July 14, 2021
    Author
    Associated Press (AP)
    Metadata
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    Classification code
    DT20210714_4
    Excerpt
    Swarns of Chinese vessels have dumped human waste and wastewater for years in a disputed area of the South China Sea, causing algae blooms that have damaged coral reefs and threatened fish in an unfolding catastrophe, a US-based expert said Monday, July 12. Satellite images over the last five years show how human waste, sewage and wastewater have accumulated and caused algae in a cluster of reefs in the Spratlys region where hundreds of Chinese fishing ships have anchored in batches, said Liz Derr, who heads Simularity Inc., a software company creating artificial intelligence technologies for satellite imagery analysis. At least 236 ships were spotted in the atoll, internationally known as Union Banks, on June 17 alone, she said at a Philippine online news forum on China’s actions in the South China Sea, which Beijing has claimed virtually in its entirety.
    Citation
    Chinese ship waste endangering reefs. (2021, July 14). SunStar Davao, p. 4.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12174/11516
    Corporate Names
    Simularity, Inc. Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA)
    Personal Names
    Menez , Eduardo Derr, Liz
    Geographic Names
    South China Sea Spratlys Union Banks Philippines China Beijing
    Subject
    reefs algal blooms Man-induced effects waste water water pollution fishing vessels ocean dumping Governments law of the sea international law territorial waters disputes
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    • SunStar Philippines [542]

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