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| Yahya getting ready to beat a gong as a symbolic launch of the seminar. | 
KOTA KINABALU: Deputy Chief Minister Datuk Seri Panglima Yahya Hussin
 has called for a collaborative effort to address the problems of the 
marine ecosystem sustainability.
Yahya pointed out that marine and
 coastal resources industries in the world are reported to represent 
more than five percent of the global gross domestic product (GDP) and 
oceans also provide the so-called ‘non-market’ benefits such as climate 
regulation, carbon sequestration and biodiversity conservation.
All
 these services will be downgraded or lost if oceans are not in a good 
state of health, so how can we afford to ignore the oceans? he 
questioned.
Speaking at the launching of the ‘Annual International
 Seminar on Marine Science & Aquaculture: Ocean Health & Our 
Future’ yesterday, Yahya pointed out that since fish landings from the 
captured fisheries are not increasing to match demand, aquaculture has 
to develop to supplement fish supply.
“The current level of 
production which is reported to be more than 63 million tons is not 
enough to meet human requirements. I know there are challenges in its 
developments but they have to be addressed.
“If as a result of 
exchange of experience and knowledge among the delegates, suitable 
strategies which are also relevant locally happen to emerge, kindly let 
us know. We would like to take up the matter for follow-up action,” he 
said in his speech at the seminar organised by the Borneo Marine 
Research Institute of Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS).
“We are 
open to ideas and willing to act on scientific evidences presented to us
 in a way that policies could be evolved based on sound decisions,” the 
Agriculture and Food Industry Minister added.
According to Yahya, 
Malaysia, and Sabah especially, prides itself on having a rich culture 
where the marine heritage has played a very important role in peoples’ 
lifestyles and the government will spare no efforts to protect those 
cultural and traditional interests of its ocean citizens.
“These 
very resources are facing the threat to their sustainability. I believe 
if scientists, social scientists, policy makers and other stakeholders 
come together to address the problems of the marine ecosystem, we can 
collectively make a difference for the benefit of current and future 
generations,” he said.
Yahya pointed out that with oceans covering
 more than 70 per cent of the earth surface and their health linked so 
closely to human welfare, the ever increasing importance of this vast 
body of water is understandable.
“As our knowledge of the oceans 
increased over recent decades, our perceptions have also changed, making
 us think rationally about limits of acceptable change in the marine 
ecosystem,” he said, adding that the vastness of oceans and their 
enormous capacity to absorb impacts does not make them immune to human 
actions.
This, he said, is evident from the changes in ocean 
chemistry, most prominently acidification, and decline in biodiversity 
and fisheries resources.
The ecosystem degradation, Yahya 
stressed, is not confined to the coastal belt but spreads to remote 
areas due to water movement and pollutants introduced locally become a 
global problem in the course of time.
Their biomagnification in 
marine organisms consumed by humans creates health hazards, he said and 
added that oceans are a common necessity that needs to be protected by 
all and for all.
This, opined Yahya, calls for worldwide efforts 
and despite advancement in fishing technology, the captured fisheries 
production has not improved beyond the 90 million tons worldwide and 
many of the commercially important fish stocks have lost sustainability.
Globally,
 fish have been harvested at a rate far beyond their reproductive 
capacity of replenishment and this is the most serious challenge to 
sustainable management of commercial fisheries, he said.
“In 
addition to direct pressure on seafood resources, habitat degradation, 
biodiversity loss and effects of climate change are acting 
simultaneously to threaten sustainability. Besides seafood, the oceans 
also support the economic sectors such as tourism, shipping and energy.
“They
 offer opportunities for sourcing pharmaceuticals to treat human 
diseases and cosmetic products. In fact, the marine bio prospecting is 
an increasingly important topic for the pharmaceutical industry,” Yahya 
said.
Source: Borneo Post 
 
 
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