Yahoo – AFP, Andrew Beatty, September 2, 2016
![]() |
| US President Barack Obama tours Midway Atoll in the North Pacific marine reserve of Papahanaumokuakea on September 1, 2016 (AFP Photo/Saul Loeb) |
Midway
Island (United States) (AFP) - President Barack Obama went off the beaten track
Thursday -- way off -- to a newly expanded marine reserve on an atoll in the
middle of the Pacific Ocean, part of an effort to polish his environmental
legacy.
Obama flew
three hours west of his native Honolulu to Midway Atoll, on the far
northwestern tip of the Hawaiian island chain.
The atoll
is situated at the heart of Papahanaumokuakea, a vast Pacific marine reserve
given protected status by then-president George W. Bush in 2006.
Obama
recently quadrupled its size to make it the world's largest marine reserve,
home to 7,000 marine species, including many endangered birds as well as the
Hawaiian monk seal and black coral, which can live for 4,500 years.
"This
is going to be a precious resource for generations to come," Obama told
reporters on Midway's Turtle Beach.
All the
atoll's 40 inhabitants -- mostly US Fish and Wildlife Service staff -- greeted
him.
Until
recently, the area was perhaps best known to military history buffs.
Seventy-four
years ago, the Battle of Midway was a decisive naval fight in World War II that
turned the tide of the war against Japan.
Obama
praised the "courage and perseverance" of the vastly outnumbered
American soldiers who repelled Japanese forces. "This is hallowed
ground," he said.
Now, he
added, protecting the vast ecosystem "allows us to study and research and
understand our oceans better than we ever have before."
![]() |
Map and
details of what is the world's largest marine reserve, just established
in
Hawaii. (AFP Photo/Alain BOMMENEL, Simon MALFATTO, Kun TIAN)
|
'Existential threat'
The
president was later set to go snorkeling with friends away from journalists,
the White House said.
Since
taking office in 2009, he has designated more protected areas than any of his
predecessors using the Antiquities Act, signed in 1906 by Theodore Roosevelt,
who established the first national monuments.
For the
outgoing president, the visit is part of an eight-year effort to put the
environment and tackling climate change higher on the political agenda.
Scientists
would be able to undertake "critically important" study of climate
change in the marine reserve, he said.
Although
Bush created Papahanaumokuakea, he also earned international scorn by rejecting
the global climate deal reached at Kyoto.
Obama, in
contrast, has led the charge to secure the recently struck Paris climate
agreement.
"Rising
temperatures and sea levels pose an existential threat to your countries,"
he said in Honolulu earlier to representatives of Pacific island nations at the
World Conservation Congress, a major conference of thousands of delegates,
including heads of state, scientists and policy makers.
"And
while some members of the US Congress still seem to be debating whether climate
change is real or not, many of you are already planning for new places for your
people to live," he added.
Asked on
Midway whether he would focus on tackling climate change as part of his work
after he leaves office in January, Obama said he may try to influence
Republican politicians who deny the phenomenon.
"This
is something that all of us are going to have to tackle and maybe I get a
little more of a hearing if I'm not occupying a political office," he
said.
After his
Hawaii visit, Obama is set to attend a G20 meeting in China, where he is
expected to announce the joint formal joining of the Paris climate accord with
President Xi Jinping.
Related Article:


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.