Olympic nightmare: A red tide in the Yellow Sea
They may have to issue a 'Turd Alert' for the sailing competition.
BEIJING: With less than six weeks before it plays host to the Olympic sailing regatta, the city of Qingdao has mobilized thousands of people and an armada of small boats to clean up an algae bloom that is choking large stretches of the coastline and threatening to impede the Olympic competition.
Red Tide in the Yellow Sea, simple, rename it the Orange Sea and carry on.
Local officials have initiated an all-out effort to clean up the algae by mid-July. Media reports estimate that 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 official news agency, Xinhua, reported that algae currently covered a third of the coastal waters designated for the Olympic races.
Water quality has been a concern for the sailing events, given that many coastal Chinese cities dump untreated sewage into the sea. At the same time, 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.
Lots of Sewer Trout spawning, eh!
But officials in Qingdao said pollution and poor water quality did not have a 'substantial link' to the current outbreak, according to Xinhua. Instead, scientists blamed the bloom on increased rainfall and warmer waters in the Yellow Sea. Algae are now blooming over more than 12,900 square kilometers, or 5,000 square miles, of the sea, according to Xinhua.
Here we go, Global Warming/Climate Change.
'We will make all our efforts to finish this job,' said a CBS/NBC/ABC propaganda official in Qingdao. 'Now, forces from the entire province have become involved.' He said ships and boats had been sent from two other coastal cities, Rizhao and Yantai, to help haul away the algae.
Declare the algae an aphrodisiac and it will be gone over night.
Yuan Zhiping, an official with the Qingdao Olympic Sailing Committee, said Sunday that the government would attempt to block algae from floating into the Olympic sailing area by installing a fenced perimeter in the sea that is more than 50 kilometers, or 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,' Yuan said, according to the Shandong News Web site.
Everyone living within a thousand miles of the site will be required to take KaoPectate three times a day during the Olympics.
Photographs in the Chinese 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 algae. State media reported that 100,000 tons of the 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 have been anticipating the city's Olympic moment for several years. One local newspaper reported that 11,000 college students had volunteered for cleanup duty during the weekend. Several companies organized teams of employees to help.
The massive algae outbreak comes as some sailing teams are already in Qingdao preparing for the Olympics.
They were able to walk the course for the first time in Olympic history.
Posted by: GolfBravoUSMC 2008-07-01 |