Mitsubishi Salt Plant Threatens Gray Whales
by Nathan LaBudde
MEXICO - In March, International Marine Mammal Project staffer Mark Palmer and I
flew to Baja California for a tour of the Exportada del Sol SA (ESSA) saltworks
at Guerrero Negro and an aerial inspection of the San Ignacio Lagoon. It is in
San Ignacio, a renowned whale sanctuary, that ESSA and the Japanese
multinational Mitsubishi hope to construct a massive salt-making facility.
This trip marked the maiden flight of a new environmental group called
Wild Angels - a band of pilots dedicated to using the power of flight to gain
perspective on environmental issues. Joining us on the expedition were Wild
Angels executive director Michael Stewart, geologist Hal Stewart and
videographer Jeff Pantahouff of the Whaleman Foundation.
With Stewart at the controls of his Cessna Turbo 310, we covered 3,000
miles in the space of three days. Pantahouff, who has led ecotourism trips to
San Ignacio Lagoon for years, organized the inspection tour on the ground.
Our delegation met twice with "professionally hostile" ESSA officials,
first to discuss the details of the proposed San Ignacio Lagoon saltworks and
subsequently to tour the existing salt production facility at Guerrero Negro. At
San Ignacio Lagoon we conducted several overflights to photo-document the site
of the proposed saltworks and spoke with locals, the majority of whom oppose the
project. Finally, after the essential work was done, we boarded a small outboard
and spent some time visiting with the lagoon's legendary friendly gray whales.
From Devil Fish to Friendly Whales
One hundred twenty-five years ago, whalers in San Ignacio Lagoon would harpoon
baby whales to draw the calves' mothers within range of their harpoons.
Retaliating adults, 30-40 feet long and weighing up to 33 tons, smashed enough
whaling skiffs in defense of their young to earn the name "devil fish."
At the end of the 20th century, however, San Ignacio Lagoon bears witness
to a much different interaction between modern humans and the whalers' devil
fish. Today, adult gray whales and their new-born calves actively seek out
whalewatchers in small boats (pangas) and allow people to stroke and pat them.
At the lagoon, we met one of the world's leading gray whale experts, Dr.
Jorge Urban of the University of La Paz, Baja California Sur. When asked what
urges a newborn gray whale towards human contact, Dr. Urban speculated that the
attraction "comes from a combination of natural curiosity of newborn mammals and
cultural learning from their mothers. The newborns are initially drawn to the
sounds made by the pangas' motors. The larger whales approach the boats to take
advantage of the skin rubbing they receive from human contact."
Dr. Urban said that trusting gray whale mothers actually push their
offspring toward the boats to introduce the babies to humans.
The Saline Sanctuary
Each year, thousands of Eastern Pacific gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus)
undertake a 5,000-mile migration, one of the longest of any mammal on Earth.
This epic trek begins in the whales' winter feeding grounds in the northern
waters of the Bering, Chukchi and Beaufort Seas and ends at four southern
breeding lagoons located in Baja California.
Of these lagoons - Guerrero Negro, Ojo de Liebre, San Ignacio and
Magdalina Bay - only San Ignacio has escaped the grip of the modern world.
Except for some unpaved roads, a few fishing cooperatives and some tourist camps
with no electricity or plumbing, this place is untouched by human impacts. Gray
whales returning to San Ignacio from December to March find the lagoon's warm,
shallow water ideal for bearing and raising calves.
Unfortunately, an environmental Sword of Damocles now hangs over San
Ignacio Lagoon as the Mexican government and Japan's Mitsubishi Corporation
attempt to resurrect a proposal to build a $120 million industrial salt
production facility in the heart of this quiet, isolated gray whale refuge.
The Sultans of Salt
Just weeks after the US government's Endangered Species List downlisted the gray
whale's status from "endangered" to "threatened," the Mexican Ministry of Trade
secretly launched a scheme to transform 116 square miles of protected area
adjacent to San Ignacio Lagoon into an industrial salt production facility. The
project is the brainchild of Baja's largest corporation, ESSA, a company jointly
owned by the Mexican government (51 percent) and Japan's Mitsubishi Corporation
(49 percent).
ESSA exports seven million tons of salt a year from it's 40-year-old
Guerrero Negro facility, 80 miles north of San Ignacio Lagoon. The proposed San
Ignacio facility would allow ESSA to produce an additional seven million tons at
a much lower cost.
In January 1995, the Mexican Grupo de Los Cien (Group of 100) first
sounded the alarm on the proposed saltworks after obtaining a copy of
ESSA/Mitsubishi's confidential initial Statement of Environmental Impact (MIA,
acronym in Spanish). The 465-page MIA contained only 23 lines pertaining to gray
whales and referred to the San Ignacio region as having "little or no
biodiversity."
That February, a devastating critique of the project appeared in a Mexico
City daily. Grupo de Los Cien sought the aid of Mexican and US environmental
groups, including Earth Island Institute. Ensuing outrage forced the Ministry of
Environment (the Mexican equivalent of the EPA) to reject the MIA, citing the
project's unsuitability for an area that is both a UN World Heritage Site and
part of the Vizcaino Biosphere Reserve. In the spring of 1995, ESSA/Mitsubishi
appealed the ministry"s ruling, but further pressure from environmentalists soon
forced withdrawal of the appeal,. ESSA is expected to resubmit a revised MIA in
the summer of 1999.
In July 1997, ESSA/Mitsubishi announced design changes to the San Ignacio
project meant to address opponents' environmental and socioeconomic concerns
and, in October, offered to undertake 18 months of gray whale scientific studies
at San Ignacio Lagoon in order to prove that the project would not adversely
affect the whales.
The Mexican Ministry for the Environment has promised that the revised MIA
will face the highest degree of scrutiny. In addition, any whale studies
attached to the new MIA will be subject to review by a special Scientific
Committee comprised of seven top US and Mexican gray whale scientists.
Despite the promise of new gray whale studies, environmentalists continue
to assert that industrial development is incompatible within a Biosphere Reserve
and a World Heritage Site.
"The idea of building an industrial salt factory at a gray whale
sanctuary, a protected area, is ridiculous," says IMMP Director David Phillips.
"Under Mexican law, the guidelines pertaining to all commercial development
within a biosphere reserve are straightforward. The development must be a
conservation activity, it must maintain cultural values, it must come from or
aid the local community, and it must protect the core of the biosphere itself."
A Salt on the Land
If the salt plant were built, this pristine plain would be disrupted by air,
water and noise pollution from trucks, earth-movers and a ten-mile-long conveyor
belt as wide as a four-lane highway. In addition, 18 diesel-fueled engines would
have to operate continuously to pump saltwater.
San Ignacio's natural salt flats would be replaced by a 100-square-mile
matrix of dikes and saltwater concentration ponds. Rainwater and tidal floods
could no longer move nutrients between the salt flats and the lagoon's larger
ecosystem. Canals and pump stations would siphon 6,000 gallons of water each
second from the lagoon into the concentration ponds, altering the lagoon's
currents, threatening larval fish and killing all life sucked into the intake
canals.
Salt bitterns, a toxic by-product of salt production, would be stored in
retaining ponds at the facility before being diluted and released back into the
ocean at the lagoon's entrance. Bitterns contain magnesium sulfate, potassium
chloride, bromine, iodine and other toxic compounds. ESSA's critics fear that
heavy rains or breaks in the facility's dikes and retaining walls could release
a flood of bitterns into the lagoon.
Another concern is the mile-and-a-half-long salt-loading pier that would
be built to the north of the lagoon's entrance in the Bahia de los Ballenas (Bay
of the Whales), a vital lobster and abalone fishery for the nearby community of
Punta Abreojos. Each month this pier would be visited by eight ocean-bound salt
"supertankers" and additional supply ships. Ships off-loading diesel fuel at the
pier could spill toxic fuel, dump trash and discharge bilge water into the
otherwise pristine waters outside the lagoon, risking the introduction of exotic
species.
ESSA/Mitsubishi already faces criticism for its environmental record at
the Guerrero Negro saltworks. Numerous toxic spills, ensuing fish die-offs, and
pollution became the subject of a 1995 Grupo de los Cien lawsuit charging ESSA
with environmental negligence and recurrent violation of Mexican laws. When ESSA
began exporting from Guerrero Negro in 1962, gray whales abandoned that lagoon
for a decade. This disappearance was undoubtedly caused by ESSA's dredging of
the lagoon's mouth to accommodate salt barge traffic.
"No compromise is acceptable as far as a saltworks at Laguna San Ignacio
is concerned. ESSA's record of environmental negligence at Guerrero Negro should
be sufficient reason for turning down the project" says Homero Aridjis,
President of the Group of 100. "The plant would make a mockery of the whole
concept of a Biosphere Reserve and destroy crucial core and buffer zones of
Mexico's largest protected area. This is not a vacant lot, or an industrial
park, but one of the most fragile ecosystems in the world."
This past June, Grupo de los Cien and the Mexican Green Party forced the
federal government to create a multipartisan 12-member commission in Mexico's
Chamber of Deputies to investigate ESSA's environmental record at Guerrero Negro
and the likely effects of the proposed saltworks at San Ignacio Lagoon.
An "Invisible" Operation?
Sensing that it can no longer use its political clout to win project approval,
ESSA/Mitsubishi is now trying to redefine the project as "invisible" and
laboring to convince opponents of the facility's ecological benefits.
"This is not a big industrial plant, this is a low-profile operation, very
similar to an agricultural operation" asserts Joaquin J. Ardura, ESSA's
Technical Vice President overseeing the project. "It will improve the area
because we are going to be making wetlands out of dead lands, so more birds will
have a refuge."
While artificial wetlands created at the Guerrero Negro facility have
provided a habitat for certain bird species, this solitary benefit cannot
outweigh the project's clear environmental risks. ESSA officials present
photographs of San Ignacio's salt flats as if these natural areas - part of the
range of last herd of endangered Sonoran pronghorn antelope in Baja - were
desperately in need of ESSA "improvement."
"With 40 years of experience at our salt facility at Guerrero Negro," ESSA
officials insist, "we can use our knowledge to ensure our project is
environmentally sound." Forty years of trial and error experience manufacturing
salt at Guerrero Negro does not give ESSA/Mitsubishi license to impose a
developer's "make-over" on San Ignacio Lagoon. This place should be left
untouched, so that Mother Nature - whose seniority far surpasses those of the
ESSA/Mitsubishi industrialists, company biologists and publicists - can continue
in her greater capacity for creating beauty, mystery and harmony.
Sidebar: The Legacy of the Lagoon
What You Can Do: This issue will be heavily influenced, if not decided, by
public opinion. Earth Island's International Marine Mammal Project has designed
a "Save San Ignacio Lagoon/Save the Gray Whales" activist postcard kit that
makes it easy to help. To receive your free set of postcards, contact the
International Marine Mammal Project : (415) 788-3666 x147 or
marinemammal@igc.org.
People wishing to enjoy the San Ignacio Lagoon whale-watching experience
should contact Jeff Pantahouff, Whaleman Foundation, PO Box 3291, Dana Point, CA
92629. To find out more about Wild Angels, contact: Michael Stewart, Wild
Angels, PO Box 4729, Santa Fe, NM 87502.