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January 09 ,2001ICZM AND OSPAR - NOT CLAMS - FOR SWILLY
Save The Swilly (STS) has called on the Irish Government to establish a genuine Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM) scheme so that all interests in Lough Swilly can be treated equally. STS was responding to a statement by Minister of State Hugh Byrne in the Seanad on 22 November, when he called on the group to "embrace the [Coordinated Local Aquaculture Management Systems] plan".
Restating its position on CLAMS, whose stated objective is to "provide a framework for the development of the [aquaculture] industry", STS said Mr Byrne had misrepresented CLAMS' role. In his Seanad submission Mr Byrne described CLAMS as a body where "all interests around a bay meet and voice their views with a view to achieving a consensus that is not driven by aquaculture alone".
However, according to CLAMS' own document , "The CLAMS group will only be comprised of representatives of all bona fide aquaculture interests; producers and their representatives (technical and associations), liaison officer, relevant regional BIM, Department of the Marine, Marine Institute and Udaras officers." A spokesman for Save The Swilly noted that none of its member groups - which include commercial fishermen, hoteliers, anglers, sailors, divers and others - met any of the CLAMS qualifications.
"CLAMS is designed to represent the aquaculture industry and STS is concerned about the expansion of this industry in Lough Swilly. It is neither logical, appropriate nor even possible for STS to become a member of CLAMS, which is an aquaculture club. What we seek is a genuinely independent Coastal Zone Management body that is not beholden to the industry in this way. We have repeatedly stressed to the Minister, most recently at a meeting in Letterkenny in September, that CLAMS is a legitimate participant at the table of consultation, but it is not itself that table."
STS is pursuing its plan to commission an Independent Environmental Impact Assessment on Lough Swilly. A starting point for this study will be the Precautionary Principle outlined in the 1992 OSPAR Convention, to which Ireland is a signatory: "(OSPAR contracting parties shall apply) the precautionary principle, by virtue of which preventive measures are to be taken when there are reasonable grounds for concern that substances or energy introduced, directly or indirectly, into the marine environment may bring about hazards to human health, harm living resources and marine ecosystems, damage amenities or interfere with other legitimate uses of the sea, even when there is no conclusive evidence of a causal relationship between the inputs and the effects."
The Irish government is using the OSPAR Convention as the basis for its current suit against the UK government over the Sellafield Nuclear Plant.
SAVE THE SWILLY
contacts:
Email: info@loughswilly.com
Phone: Tony Morrison (353) 07493-63733
Phone: John Mulcahy (353) 07491-59113; (353) 086-2808636
Address: c/o Buncrana Anglers Association,
Castle Lane, Buncrana, Co. Donegal
Website: www.loughswilly.com