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TV
CELEBRITY KATE HUMBLE JOINS 300,000-STRONG PETITION CALLING FOR A MARINE
ACT NOW!
The call for a Marine Act - giving greater protection
to the UK’s
marine wildlife - will come to London later today when a 300,000-strong
petition - comprising supporters from four conservation organisations -
will be delivered to Downing Street by four children representing our future
generations.
The RSPB, The Wildlife Trusts, Marine Conservation Society and WWF are
campaigning for a full Marine Bill in next month’s Queen’s
Speech. They have long been campaigning for new and improved marine nature
conservation legislation. Currently, the groups regard existing marine
legislation as ineffective, inadequate or even non-existent.
The petition has attracted widespread support, including a pledge from
Kate Humble, the RSPB’s newest Vice President and a big fan of the
marine environment.
Kate Humble said: “As a diver I know what an amazing wealth of wildlife
we have in the seas around the UK. But, I'm also aware of the pressures
the marine environment is under. That's why I'm supporting the call for
a Marine Bill now to introduce marine reserves to give our wonderful sealife
the protection it deserves.”
The marine campaign coalition is calling on the Prime Minister to include
a full Marine Bill in the Queen’s Speech in November – not
the draft Bill that was mentioned in Gordon Brown’s draft legislative
programme. Putting marine planning at its heart and giving much stronger
protection to marine wildlife, the groups says it is vital that the Bill
includes measures to designate and conserve nationally-important marine
wildlife sites, including highly-protected marine reserves.
Melissa Moore, Marine Conservation Society senior policy officer, said: “We
need a full Marine Bill in November’s Queen’s Speech. A draft
Marine Bill next year would be just another consultation and we have had
two of those already. The shocking adverts the coalition has placed in
today’s national papers reflect the urgent need for a Marine Act
to halt the demise of a range of UK marine species and habitats while we
are on watch.”
Jan Brown, Senior Marine Policy Officer at WWF says: “Our seas have
been in decline for some time and it is imperative that the Government
addresses the urgency of the situation and introduces a Marine Bill now.
The facts are inescapable, our seas are in crisis. We need to act and cannot
afford another year of delay by the Government.”
Joan Edwards, head of marine policy for The Wildlife Trusts, said: “The
UK public clearly places great value on our seas and believes they should
be properly protected. We urgently need new laws to protect our seas and
marine life. The number of signatures handed in today shows how public
support is growing - as is awareness of how we treat our life support system.
But our campaign cannot stop until there’s renewed commitment from
Gordon Brown to improve the protection and management of the UK’s
marine environment.”
Dr Sharon Thompson, a senior marine policy officer with the RSPB, said: “Seabirds
provide one of the greatest wildlife spectacles the UK has to offer. The
UK hosts the majority of the global breeding populations of Manx shearwater,
gannet and great skua and the UK coasts throng with millions of individual
seabirds, a testament to the richness of our seas. Although these birds
are protected on land, at sea they have little protection – a Marine
Bill would pave the way for giving them, and the seas they depend upon,
the protection they need.”
Preliminary work by the RSPB has identified at least 23 examples of sites
of national importance for nesting seabirds that could benefit from further
protection from a Marine Bill. Although many of the actual nesting colonies
are already protected on land, the foraging areas these seabirds need at
sea are not protected at all.
The list includes St Bees Head, in Cumbria, the only English nesting site
for the black guillemot; England’s rarest nesting seabird.
The call for a Marine Bill has also attracted widespread cross-party support
with 117 MPs signing the Early Day Motion (EDM 1833) calling for its introduction
in the Queen’s Speech.
Four children representing the four organisations will hand in the Marine
Bill petition to Downing Street at 9am on Wednesday 17 October.
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