$102M to Protect Australian Antarctic Territory
Media Release
The Hon Dr Sharman Stone
Parliamentary
Secretary to the Minister for the Environment and
Heritage
14 May 2002
The Commonwealth Government will spend $102.3 million in 2002-03 to deepen understanding of Australia's Antarctic Territory and to protect Southern Ocean fisheries, among other activities.
Parliamentary Secretary for Antarctica, Dr Sharman Stone, said the Antarctic program would include further efforts to combat illegal fishing, installation of wind turbines to power Antarctic stations, research into whale distribution and abundance, and large-scale studies of the way Antarctic ice affects the world's oceans.
"The $102.3 million program for 2002-03 demonstrates the Howard Government's strong commitment to protecting the Antarctic environment and gaining knowledge about the region's role in global climate processes," Dr Stone said.
"The program will continue state-of-the-art research into the remediation of past waste sites in Antarctica and revise Australia's waste management plan for Antarctica. It will also pursue measures to combat illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing for Patagonian and Antarctic toothfish.
"The Government will support renewable energy initiatives with the installation of wind turbines at Mawson station, which will reduce reliance on fossil fuels for power generation by 75 per cent. Three turbines will be operating in March 2003, weather permitting.
"The Government will also pursue certification
of Australia's environmental management system to meet
globally-recognised International Organisation for
Standardisation (ISO) standards and establish a baseline for
continuous improvement of environmental protection
practices."
(The ISO standards are guidelines for
streamlining environmental management and ensuring that
adequate environmental management is integrated into an
organisation's activities.)
This year the Government will
also:
- Develop an Australian strategy for managing
tourism in Antarctica.
- Investigate factors affecting
krill, a key part of the Antarctic food web. This will
include a major study to assess whale distribution and
abundance in relation to krill.
- Study the diet and
behaviour of seals, whales and seabirds, including locating
their food sources using an innovative, non-intrusive
molecular technique developed by Australian scientists.
- Assess the effects of exploitation of marine species
around Australia's Heard and McDonald Islands with the use
of an Australian-developed computer-modeling program.
-
Continue important research into the interactions between
the ice shelf and the ocean, ice shelf dynamics, and their
influence on global ocean circulation and climate.
Ends