Gladstone in Queensland is the principle access point to the Capricornia group of islands on the Great Barrier Reef and the site of dredging for a massive liquid natural gas plant development. It is also the hot spot for the recent deaths of turtles, dugongs, dolphins, and now disease in fish, which is now even affecting fishermen:
A dozen fishermen have reported being ill from handling the fish, along with the pregnant wife of a deckhand and their two young children exposed when they met their dad when his boat was pulled ashore. At least two of the fishermen have spent time in hospital, including Tannum Sands operator Trevor Falzon, who spent five days on a drip. Mr Falzon said fishermen had no option but to act, fearing children would be exposed to the toxins during the school holidays. “I couldn’t walk,” Mr Falzon said. “I spent five nights in the Mater Hospital in Gladstone. It cost $5800. My foot was flaming red.
Commercial fishermen became ill too. Fourth-generation fisherman Chris Sipp believed dredging was to blame.
He said the fish were fine in clear reef water but became stressed as they approached Gladstone Harbour. Once in the port, they “roll” — die and go belly-up.
“We are devastated at the situation here in Gladstone but we know that we have done all the right things to advise all government authorities to keep people safe,” he said.
Queensland Seafood Industry Association president Michael Gardner said the dead turtles, dugongs and fish found in the Gladstone area were “an environmental disaster”.
He said the sick and dead animals coincided with dredging by Gladstone Port Corporation working on the massive LNG plant and pipeline being built in the harbour … But the port corporation says it is not to blame.
The Gladstone Port Corporation has a point. This project has all required approvals from the state and Commonwealth governments.
The State Fisheries Department reacted to these latest events by instituting a closure of 500 square kilometres of fishing grounds, with $200,000 fines for fishing in them for recreational or commercial fishermen, and appointing a panel to review the problem.
So why is Gladstone a hot spot for turtle, dugong and dolphin deaths and now poisoned fish and fishermen? As discussed in Crikey there are multiple potential sources of contaminants that could of washed onto the Queensland coast following the cyclones that caused overflows of mine tailing dams, sewerage plants, etc. A report by the Queensland government into these problems on the Fitzroy River, a portion of which ends up in the Gladstone Harbour, show tailing dams overflowing. However the report completed into the toxicology of fish is missing.
Michael McCabe of the Capricornia Conservation Group writes:
“‘… Action Items from the 16 December 2010 Fitzroy Water Quality Advisory Group (FWQAG) were tabled at the FWQAG meeting on Thursday 7 April 2011. Included was the (long) standing request for the final sick fish study following the 2008 flooding of the Ensham Coal Mine by the Mackenzie River which resulted in the discharge of contaminated mine water.”
Whatever problems there were with the Fitzroy River appeared to have passed (into the sediment?), with a recent barramundi fishing competition revealing that no fish with lesions, red spot, cloudy eyes or other disease were seen in and around Gladstone Harbour.
Gladstone Harbour, however, does also receive sediment from several rivers and streams that drain other industrial and intensive agricultural areas and right now the harbour is being dredged. Dredging spoil from the harbour is currently being dumped off the East Bank, not far from popular fishing areas with strong tides, and it is likely that the dredge spoil will spread outside the fisheries exclusion zone.
According to Queensland Treasurer and Deputy Premier Andrew Fraser in March this year:
‘..the first stage of the project will see six million cubic tonnes (underline ours) of material dredged from the Western Basin and placed in the port’s offshore spoil area.
“This is approximately one quarter of the total amount of material to be dredged from the Western Basin.
“Dredging will start in early June and we expect that by early August the majority of spoil will be placed in the bund area currently under construction at Fisherman’s Landing.
“This project has been conditioned by both state and federal governments and will serve as a template for future dredging works throughout Australia …”
All politicians are reliant on the advice of scientists they employ or are employed by corporations seeking development approvals for such projects — but is the science, or the frameworks legislated for it to function in, reliable? When something unpredicted goes wrong, does the state or federal government environment bureaucracy have the skills, ability or even the opportunity to address the issues?
Last weekend another four dead green turtles washed up on Facing Island bordering Gladstone Harbour and the situation appears to be worsening. The poisoning of fishermen and the deaths of turtles, dugongs and dolphins is attracting international publicity — even in China — our newest tourism market.
Still there has been no comprehensive and ongoing testing of the more than 100 collected specimens from the 1000-plus turtles, dolphins and dugongs that have washed up dead this year across the Great Barrier Reef. To date there has also been no toxicological evaluation of dead and diseased fish, sharks, crabs and prawns.
Such an event is unprecedented in the history of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, Australia’s single biggest tourist attraction.
In response, sensible governments surely would suspend dredging in Gladstone Harbour until the toxins and pathogens in the sediment — and those causing these deaths and disease can be accurately identified — wouldn’t they?
Yeah, but as long as someone’s making a profit, right?
This important story exposing the deaths of turtles, fish and dugongs and now the poisoning of fishermen and in some instances their family members, at Gladstone in Queensland and around the Capricornia islands on the Great Barrier Reef. Is yet another wake up warning. Why is our Federal government permitting licensed polluters to destroy and pollute our natural environment right around the nation? I make a connection to the “accidents ” at two Orica sites in NSW, where well over a hundred breaches of licenses has not resulted any serious penalty. Any number of mines with holding dams that over flow due to “environmental influences” rain beyond the control of the mine operators. The licenses our governments continue to issue and renew on our behalf serve no good purpose, apart from providing a tool for selfish corporate citizens to work around the intention of our protection of the environment laws. Not a lot has changed since the days when ICI used to send barges out from Botany to dump forty four gallon drums of toxic waste into the ocean twenty miles off Sydney. Most informed people are well aware the ground water beneath Botany is polluted those responsible have put enormous pumps in place but it is said they are loosing the battle to stop and remove the contaminated ground water. What a dam disgrace reports have been withheld and test of dead sea creatures have not been done at Gladstone. Give it time and government will hold yet another inquiry. I expect my representatives to have taken legislative action years ago. Edward James
Fish , turtles , dolphins and dugongs don’t vote .
I have been trying to buy a mine. I wanted to be the first pinko intellectual to buy a mine so I could have some footing in the mining debate. Seems that if you mine then you rule. Want a rail up grade build a mine, want housing solution build a mine, want to drive all over farming land willy nilly and sink a well for gas buy a mine. Want to use as much water as you want for free buy a mine. Who wants to be a millionaire buy a mine.
Buy a mine. It’s the only answer for right thinging fellas.
So far I haven’t got a mine. However, If you don’t want to pay for pollution, buy a mine, if you want to see bid bl**dy boats full of Australian stuff go off shore buys mine, if the company looks Australian but is owned 80+% by foreign investors who won’t have to pay tax in Australia buy a mine. Bring back good old Donny argus and get him on the Aussie team. He loved selling big chunks of westralia to Chinese. Get him on the help-out-a-mate and get the bastards to clean up after the party and to pay for the garbage and save a bit of what we have for our kids. dinkum don will do it.
QANTAS looks like it bought a mine it is heading down the shaft and only Chinese people can fit in the seats, ( as a foot note can somebody ask QANTAS to make the in flight magazine in note book size so you can read it with the space left between the seats)
Buy a mine people it is the new hope and way to freedom to do what ever you want any old time.. And stick the government in rehab so it can get off the coal crack it is on.
Jobs for Australians, coal for Chinese, nothing for our kids. Good onya mate
Buy a mine today
Um, what’s a ‘cubic tonne’ and why isn’t a standard unit of measure used?