By AzerNewsEnvironmental pollution threatens the Caspian Sea seals, Deputy Head of
Iran's Environmental Protection in Marine Environment said.
Abdol-Reza
Karbasi spoke at the ceremony of the 10th anniversary of signing Tehran
Convention on November 4, Fars news agency reported
Delegations from Caspian littoral states -Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, and Russia- participated in the ceremony.
According to Karbasi, Caspian Sea's seals population has decreased from one million to 100,000 in the past twenty years.
He
also warned about the littoral states' activities in the oil industry
that have led to serious environmental problems in the region.
According
to Karbasi, the littoral states will sign a protocol on the protection
of the regional wildlife in Turkmenistan in the near future.
A protocol on trans-border environmental reports is also being prepared and will be signed in Turkmenistan.
Caspian seals were included in the Red Book of the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources in 2000.
According
to UNDP Deputy Resident Representative in Iran Balasubramaniam Murali,
the protection of the Caspian Sea and the conservation of its
bio-diversity and resources require environment diplomacy, Islamic
Republic News Agency reported.
Addressing the event, Murali said
that attention should be paid to the provisions of the Caspian Sea
Convention, while taking special and coordinated measures in that
direction.
He warned that the Caspian Sea ecosystem which has
reached an alarming stage would suffer irreparable damage if it reaches
an alarming level.
According to him, the Caspian Convention faces
many challenges that should be removed through compiling a national
program for the member countries.
Caspian seal is one of the
smallest members of the earless seal family. They can be found not only
along the shorelines, but also on the many rocky islands and floating
blocks of ice on the Caspian Sea.
The alarming news about the
Caspian seals' mass mortality is increasingly coming from all the
littoral sates. Earlier in October, a number of dead seals were found on
the shores of Azerbaijani industrial city Sumgayit.
The cause of the mass mortality of these unique creatures is still unknown, but one of the main negative factors is pollution.
Solving
this environmental problem is of great importance to preserve the
population, and it can only be reached through the joint efforts of all
five countries.
The resource-rich Caspian Sea is also inhabited
by 141 fish species, and the main fishery in the region -a sturgeon
fishery- is operated using this basin's resources.
Earlier in Baku, a ban on sturgeon fishing in the Caspian Sea was suggested.
The
five Caspian states signed the Framework Convention for the Protection
of the Marine Environment of the Caspian Sea in November 2003.
Kazakhstan,
Azerbaijan and Russia signed an agreement on the delimitation of
adjacent sections of the Caspian Sea on May 14, 2003.