A Qatar Guide for Tourists and Residents
 
Home   Qatar   Contact   Help Us   Write For Us   Forum   Qatar Jobs   Qatar Map
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2008

Fish, Fish Prices and Fish Stocks!

Qatar is known for its bountiful fish catches - but with an increasing population the Government is acting to preserve fish stocks


A selection of fish at Doha's wholesale fish market
In Qatar's poorer days, fish was what sustained the local population. Fish was so plentiful that people were embarrassed to give guests fish - it was seen as being mean, or a sign of poverty. In fact, fish was so plentiful that it was exported to be used as fertilizer.

If you are a fish lover in Qatar, nothing quite beats buying the fish fresh off the boats on the Corniche. There you can buy the long silver king fish, small sharks or bucket loads of crabs - and of course the ugly but very delicious hamour.

For a more complete choice you should visit the wholesale fish market, where you can buy squid, tuna, octopus and a whole range of other fish I couldn't even name. For two riyals a kilo - the price is set by the authorities - a man will clean the fish for you. Just make sure you visit the fish market in the morning, especially in the hot season, or you may find you the stench overpowering.

However, the price of fish has been increasing over recent years. When I first came here I could still buy a whole tuna for 5 riyals at the wholesale market, which would feed the whole family, but those days are past.

Perhaps the reason for increasing prices is due to the increasing population which Qatar's fish stocks are feeding. Three years ago Qatar's population was estimated at 800,000 - many times the few hundred families that lived here at the turn of the century, and just over half the latest estimate of one and a half million.

Now both fans of sea food and fishermen will be complaining after the government has imposed restrictions on the movements of fishing boats.

Fishing traps dry in the sun with the Doha skyline in the distanceThere already no-go areas in Qatar, but now boats are only allowed to make three trips a month, with each trip lasting no longer than five days.

Fish prices have already increased. According to the Gulf Times on Friday, King fish had increased from QR22/kilo to QR40 a kilo, while the price of Hamour had increased by about 75%.

While fishermen and consumers in these countries may be complaining, those in other countries should be wishing that their countries had taken the same steps years ago. According to the United Nations Environment Programme, commercial fish populations in the North Atlantic of cod, hake, haddock and flounder have fallen by as much as 95%.

I have also seen it personally. Catches of mackerel on trips home have fallen every year, while on a return trip to a town in Spain I was sad to see the once proud fleet of fishing boats reduced to just three solitary ships.

I was surprised to see that the market and the shops were still well stocked with fish - until I was told that they were now all imported. It seems that the answer of those countries who have destroyed their own fish stocks is now to destroy other country's.

Nitin Desai, Secretary General of the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development, has warned that:

Overfishing cannot continue. The depletion of fisheries poses a major threat to the food supply of millions of people.”

fish dishActing strongly to preserve fish stocks now might mean that, unlike much of the rest of the world, the population of Qatar can continue to eat fish for years to come.


AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Qatar Visitor Friends

Qatar Jobs

Find the best deal, compare prices and read what other travellers have to say about Qatar

Tags

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Qatar Environment: Waste, Solar Panels and Electricity

electricity pylon
After writing my recent post on environment in Qatar, I was impressed to see that Qatar is now planning to start producing electricity from waste.

According to an article in the Gulf Times today, a waste plant which will be opened next year will produce enough electricity (40 mega watts) both to power all the plant's needs and those of its 400 employees and their families. The electricity will be generated through the process of composting organic domestic waste, which can then be used as fertilizer. In total, the plant hopes to recycle 50% of domestic rubbish.

The story follows on from news in February that reports Qatar is considering building one of the largest solar power complexes in the world to meet soaring electricity demand, which is predicted to increase by up to four times in the next 30 years. The solar farm would have a capacity of 3,500 megawatts.

Qatar is also considering additional energy from a nuclear power plant.

Also see Qatar's Natural History by author Frances Gillespie

(Image above by Gin Able)

AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Qatar Environment

When I first arrived in QatarI couldn’t believe how much energy was wasted. Energy on massive cars, energy on air-conditioning that was never shut off, energy on lights that blazed on all night, energy on a massive construction boom that has only become more frenetic since I arrived.

And never one word about the environment.

Yet despite the lack of awareness, Qatar is one of the countries that stands most to lose from global warming.

The country is low lying, and the Pearl development which it is so immensely proud of is, in places, just two meters above sea-level

What’s more, with temperatures reaching 50 degrees in the height of the summer, the country really doesn’t need to get any hotter.

The first sign of environmental awareness that I noticed was at a food festival, when the school hosting the festival had put out recycling bins. Each bin was to contain a different type of rubbish. Unfortunately, the guests didn’t notice, and the bins were filled with all kinds of different junk – and left-over cake.

But there have been other signs that Qatar is gaining in awareness.

In 2007 Qatar presided over the Montreal conference, and the conference agreed to accelerate the phase out of chemicals that damage the ozone layer.

Other signs have been slow to appear, despite frequent articles on the subject by local naturalist Francis Gillespie, but for the first time on the way to the beach this weekend I noticed signs urging residents not to litter the beaches.

When we got to the beach a large rubbish bin had been planted in the middle, and much of the rubbish we had seen in the past had disappeared.

And in the middle of the desert a camel farm is being established that will be powered purely by solar and wind power. The aim of the camel farm is, through managed farming, to combat or reverse the process of desertification.

Qatar is following a new trend in the region. The UAE is looking at building a huge solar panel farm, and even Saudi Arabia is investing in renewable energy. Countries in the region are also looking at nuclear power as an alternative to oil.

However, just look around and you will see Qatar has a long way to go before it becomes environmentally aware – not least with its huge buildings filled with large windows that leak the coolness from the air conditioners in the summer.

There is an increased environmental awareness. But I fear it is still too little, too late.




AddThis Social Bookmark Button


Qatar Visitor Friends

Qatar Jobs

Find the best deal, compare prices and read what other travellers have to say about Qatar

Tags