News Algae Threatens Olympic Sailing

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BEIJING — With less than six weeks before it plays host to the Olympic sailing regatta, the city of Qingdao, China, has mobilized thousands of people and an armada of small boats to clean up an algal bloom choking the coastline and threatening to impede the competition.

Volunteers helped to clean up a huge algae bloom in Qingdao on Monday. Local officials have begun an intense effort to clean up the algae by mid-July. News reports estimate as many as 20,000 people have either volunteered or been ordered to participate in the operation, while 1,000 boats are scooping algae out of the Yellow Sea. The country’s official news agency, Xinhua, reported that algae currently cover a third of the coastal waters designated for the Olympic competition.

Water quality has been a concern for the Olympic sailing events. Many coastal Chinese cities dump untreated sewage into the sea, and rivers and tributaries emptying into coastal waters are often contaminated with high levels of nitrates from agricultural and industrial runoff. These nitrates contribute to the red tides of algae that often bloom along sections of China’s coastline.

But officials in Qingdao said in recent days that pollution and poor water quality did not have a “substantial link” to the current outbreak, according to Xinhua. Instead, scientists blamed the increased rainfall and warmer waters in the Yellow Sea for the bloom. Algae blooms now affect more than 5,000 square miles of seawater, Xinhua reported.

“We will make all our efforts to finish this job,” said a propaganda official in Qingdao, who asked not to be named because of the political delicacy of the issue. “Now, forces from the entire province have become involved.” He said ships and boats have been dispatched from two other coastal cities, Rizhao and Yantai, to help haul away the algae.

Yuan Zhiping, an official with the Qingdao Olympic Sailing Committee, said Sunday that the government would try to block algae from floating into the Olympic sailing area by installing in the sea a fenced perimeter more than 30 miles long.

“I believe we will make sure the Olympics sailing area is clean by July 15 through our efforts, and make sure the Olympics sailing goes smoothly,” Mr. Yuan said, according to the Shandong News Web site.

Photographs in the Chinese news media showed rickety wooden boats overflowing with green mounds of algae collected from the sea. One photo showed a young boy crouched on a beach beside piles of the leafy glop as a dump truck carried off a large load of it. State news outlets reported that 100,000 tons of algae had already been taken out of the water. Much of it was being transported to farms as feed for pigs and other animals, according to news reports.

Residents of Qingdao and its environs, where about seven million people live, have been anticipating the city’s Olympic moment for years. One local newspaper reported that 11,000 college students had volunteered for cleanup duty over the weekend. Several companies had organized teams of employees to help.

The massive outbreak comes with some sailing teams already in Qingdao preparing for the Olympics. Photographs in the Australian news media showed an Australian team seemingly stuck in a carpet of algae during a training run.

In British news media, a British windsurfer who has been training in Qingdao, Bryony Shaw, said the algae would be an issue if the waters were not cleaned up. “There’s no way you can sail through it,” she said. “If it’s still here in August, it could be a real problem.”
Qingdao’s situation is another challenge for Beijing’s Olympic organizers, who have committed to delivering a clean and healthy environment for the Olympics.

Air quality remains a serious concern in Beijing. On Tuesday, the city will begin removing 300,000 high-polluting vehicles, mostly trucks, from local roads. Later in July, the city will institute temporary restrictions to remove half of all motor vehicles from the streets.
But air quality remains such a large problem that officials are also preparing contingency plans that could force factories across much of northern China to close temporarily if conditions warrant.


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/01/world/asia/01algae.html?_r=2&hp&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
 
Wow. How many olympians included this in their training? I hope they get it cleaned up in time.

Splash1jul.jpg
 
Slate online mentioned the algae bloom problem: http://www.slate.com/id/2194608/
Also, here are some recent vids of the clean-up and some foggy dangerous sailing in Qingdao:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtgt6uqlhR0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b-iVz75aibk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4IAAa667EM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkOUY6yqZNg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RrDkrGRSrc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHM2nTUFuEw
I think it's funny that so many Chinese flags are being displayed at the clean-up site. I'd have made another choice: downplay the location's identity and hide the flags. Or, better yet! Display another country's flag and distract people from identifying horror with your own country. Myanmar's or the USA's would not be surprising, as both have proven track records for botching enviro-disaster relief. I love how the clean-up crew is being called "volunteers."

An idea to voice concerns about human rights in China: screen-print the Bill of Rights on USA sails! If room's an issue, just the First Amendment would send the right message, too.
 

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