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http://news./s/nm/20070608/sc_nm/india_port_turtles_dc & printer=1;_ylt=A\

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Greenpeace says Indian port killing rare turtles

By Krittivas MukherjeeFri Jun 8, 8:44 AM ET

 

A port being built on India's eastern coast is a " killing field " of rare Olive

Ridley turtles and other marine life, and should be shut down, Greenpeace said

on Friday.

 

It said the Dhamra port in Orissa state, being built by Indian conglomerate Tata

group, is close to the beaches of Gahirmatha, one of the few remaining mass

nesting sites of the Olive Ridleys in the world.

 

The group recently conducted a 40-day study of the ecology around the port site

and came across more than 2,000 turtles, rare horseshoe crabs, crab-eating

frogs, dolphins and snakes, killed by mechanized fishing boats.

 

The port site is not a turtle nesting ground, but is part of the breeding and

feeding ground for many species and is intrinsically rich in bio-diversity, it

said.

 

" The Tatas, who claim to be a socially responsible company, now have to decide

if they want to place profits above environment, " Ashish Fernandes, Greenpeace's

oceans campaigner, told a conference.

 

" We have an incontrovertible scientific critique of their project and we have

sent a report to them as well. "

 

The Tatas had earlier said the port would not harm the turtles and if it did

they would not build the project, Fernandes said.

 

" The port is being built after obtaining all necessary clearance from the

relevant authorities, " Santosh Mohapatra, chief executive of Dhamra Port Company

Limited, told Reuters.

 

" Not only did the National Environment Appellate Authority say the port site is

unsuitable for turtle nesting but also it is suitably far from the mass nesting

site. "

 

Work has just begun on Dhamra port, an all-weather facility expected to be

operational by the end of 2009.

 

The port's draught is 18 metres, which would make it India's deepest port. Its

13 berths can handle more than 80 million tonnes of cargo per year.

 

" Once you have a port it will lead to ancillary development. This is not good

news for the local ecology, " said S.K. Dutta, a member of the International

Union for Conservation of Nature group, which conducted the Greenpeace study.

 

Hundreds of thousands of Olive Ridleys swim up to Orissa's beaches every year to

nest, but their numbers are falling drastically, victims of government neglect

and rapid industrialization.

 

Greenpeace says more than 120,000 turtles have been washed up dead on Orissa's

shores in the past 12 years, most caught in the nets of trawlers, which the law

says should not be there. Total deaths could have been significantly higher.

 

 

 

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