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Japan’s decision to discharge radioactive waste water into the Pacific ‘unconscionable’


Fiji
Published date: 8-Jun-2023

Japan’s plan to discharge radioactive waste water into the Pacific has been described by Acting Forum Secretary General, Dr Filimon Manoni ‘unconscionable’.

Dr Manoni made the remarks at the World Ocean Day commemorated in Fiji’s capital Suva, today.

“Because for us here in the Pacific, the ocean is everything. If it were up to us, this celebration would be on a daily basis. As that is how much it matters to us. We are inextricably linked to the oceans.

For many of us, we only have the ocean and each other, it is all we have. It is indeed the exclusive source of vitality and livelihood it is basis of our existence, our livelihoods, our cultures, our identity aspirations, and of course, our future,” Dr Manoni said in his address at the World Ocean Day celebration in Suva.

He said the Pacific Ocean is no doubt the single greatest natural endowment to us – it is home to an incredible amount of marine life.

“It should be our generations investment to guarantee that inter-generational equity and the legacy we want to hand over to our children and their children.

Ensuring effective stewardship of this biodiversity, in the face of a multitude of challenges is our responsibility today. We have to understand better the climate oceans nexus. We cannot ignore the pressing challenges of pollution, illegal unreported and unregulated fishing, warming and acidification and the erosion of marine biodiversity. These issues are no longer distant threats. They are real, they are here, they are immediate and they demand our undivided attention,” Dr Manoni stressed.

He said the issue is further exacerbated by the challenge now presented by Japan’s decision to discharge radioactive waste waster into the Pacific.

“It is unconscionable that while we are still struggling to address the outstanding nuclear testing legacy issues and to get those responsible to own up to their legal and perhaps appeal to their moral underpinnings to clean up their mess– we are now looking most likely to another wave of challenges with nuclear waste.

“The potential impacts of such a discharge are still unknown. But we are hopeful that the undertaking by the Prime Minister of Japan in February this year that there will not be any discharge until it is safe to do so is hold true. We also appeal to the responsible parties to do clean up the Runit Dome in the Marshall Islands,” the incoming Ocean Commissioner, Dr Manoni emphasised.

This is why Forum Leaders have envisioned for our region the 2050 Strategy for the Blue Pacific Continent, he said.

“A vision by 2050 that we can maintain a healthy ocean, abundant in resources and supporting a healthy planet for prosperity. In effect the Ocean underpins the 2050 Strategy.

As the Forum Leaders are deciding on this process, we should expect later this year an implementation plan for the strategy outlining some of the region wide collective steps to achieve that vision for transformative change. We are here today to celebrate this one blue ocean on this one blue planet- and for that we do it the Pacific way, in our voices, and with everything we have and every shade of ocean colour possible,” he said.

Dr Manoni thanked and congratulated school children at Albert in Suva for sacrificing a few hours of their learning time to be part of this celebration.

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