Chile plans world's biggest marine park to protect Easter Island fish stocks
Chile plans world's biggest marine park to protect Easter Island fish stocks
Local people say way of life is under threat from industrial vessels, and see plan as chance to protect environment and repair relations with mainland
Adam Vaughan on Easter Island
@adamvaughan_uk
Sunday 13 September 2015 09.56 EDT
In the pre-dawn gloom in a small harbour on Easter Island, three fishermen fill their boats. Instead of piling nets, they load rocks which they will use to drop a line tens of metres below the swelling waves. The lines will be hauled up hand over hand with their catch, huge yellowfin tuna.
The technique would be recognisable to the fishermens ancestors who have worked these waters for hundreds of years. But this way of life on one of the worlds remotest inhabited islands is under threat, say local people and conservationists, from illegal fishing by industrial vessels that dwarf these tiny boats.
For many of the 7,000 people who live here and for the government of Chile, which administers the island from the mainland 2,300 miles east, the solution is a vast marine park, plans for which are set to be unveiled early next month.
Encompassing 278,000 sq miles of ocean, it would be the worlds biggest, if created before another one proposed by the UK around the Pitcairn Islands, the nearest land 1,300 miles west.
More:
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/sep/13/chile-plans-easter-island-marine-park-fishing