Special Report for Andaman News TV11 Phuket, broadcast to
Phang Nga, Krabi & Phuket + Radio Thailand FM90.5 Phuket,
Although this may look like dumping of concrete rubbish in
the sea, this is in fact for a worthwhile artificial reef generating project.
On Monday the 23rd of January the project by the
The local people had previously agreed and discussed the positioning of the
project with the PMBC, under the Department of Marine and Coastal Resources and
Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment and also joined the Cherng Thale
Administrative Organization to promote it.
The Director of PMBC, Wannakiat Thubthimsang, explained to us how this project
grew: “We have this project combining 2 projects. The 1st is artificial reefs
of 50 cubes, the other source of budget is from
tsunami rehabilitation, so we also construct the same type of 280 more blocks,
so total 330 blocks in
They plan to scatter the 1.5 metre long cubes or blocks in about a 1 kilometre
square area near Waew Island at about 10-15 metre depths well away from the
popular shores.
The district office plans to promote the location with marker buoys as a new
scuba diving site as it will attract coral and fish over the years. The
artificial reefs will also be sources of food for all kinds of marine lives
creating natural food chains and lead to better undersea ecological systems,
and also attract small scale sustainable fishing in long-tail boats. Whether
the two diving and fishing communities can share the sites remains to be seen,
but Wannakiart emphasized the local people’s participation: “We have done this
project under participation of people in this area every step, with fishermen
and owners of dive shops, so after deployment we ask groups of fishermen in
long tail boats to take care of the reefs.”
The PMBC staff will also check them and evaluate how many come to use to
artificial reefs. The cubes size and shape should also prevent larger trawler
fishing vessels from using this fragile area. It will take about 3 years for
colonies of coral to form on the concrete, and in about 8-9 years they should
look as natural as normal reefs.
The Department of Marine and Coastal Resources is planning over the next 2
months to place more of them in Bang Tao bay as the first location, before
expanding to 6 more sites; 1 at Kata-Karon bay, and 1 at Coral-Bon islands, 2
sites in Racha Yai islands, all in Phuket province; then 1 near Phi Phi and 1
near Ao Nang area in Krabi province; some blocks will be in 20-30 metre depths,
and all will be outside of the natural marine sanctuary and national parks.
Wannakiat also revealed some of the costs:“One site is
1.5 million baht for 280 cubed blocks.”
Meanwhile the Cherng Talay administrative body administrator Samart Sa-ke said
his office will spend 600,000 baht to promote the Bangtao artificial reef as a
new diving site, as there is also an old tin dredge capsized under the sea
there for a long time and they should both attract more divers’ interest.
The tourism community should welcome this initiative which
will pay back some of the damage done by man and nature over the last few
years.