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Brandenburg sees no acute crisis after the Oder fish die-off

2022-08-31T13:57:37.640Z


Brandenburg sees no acute crisis after the Oder fish die-off Created: 08/31/2022Updated: 08/31/2022 15:54 Shortly before sunrise on the German-Polish border river Oder. The fish kill continues to be a mystery. © Patrick Pleul/dpa Many fish have died in the Oder in recent weeks. The final cause is still pending. Now new samples in the German-Polish border river give hope for a recovery. Potsdam


Brandenburg sees no acute crisis after the Oder fish die-off

Created: 08/31/2022Updated: 08/31/2022 15:54

Shortly before sunrise on the German-Polish border river Oder.

The fish kill continues to be a mystery.

© Patrick Pleul/dpa

Many fish have died in the Oder in recent weeks.

The final cause is still pending.

Now new samples in the German-Polish border river give hope for a recovery.

Potsdam – After the fish die-off in the Oder, Brandenburg gave the all-clear signal.

"We haven't had any dead fish for a few days now," said Environment Minister Axel Vogel (Greens) on Wednesday in the environment committee of the Brandenburg state parliament in Potsdam.

"We can therefore say: The (...) acute crisis situation is over." The values ​​for oxygen and chlorophyll are declining and are developing towards the normal values, said Vogel.

The counties concerned had cleared the banks of dead fish.

According to Vogel, daphnia - small water crustaceans that are used for control purposes - no longer die either.

This is also an indicator of relaxation in many places.

Since the beginning of August, tons of dead fish have been recovered from the German-Polish border river.

Experts assume that high salinity in the river is a major reason, combined with low water, high temperatures and a toxic species of algae.

According to Federal Environment Minister Steffi Lemke (Greens), hundreds of chemical substances could be responsible for the environmental catastrophe.

The fish kill had led to upsets in the relationship between Germany and Poland.

Poland insists on an expansion of the Oder, Germany wants a stop.

According to the Brandenburg Environment Minister, the exact cause of the fish kill has not yet been finally clarified.

The final report by a German-Polish group of experts on the causes should be available by the end of September.

According to his environment ministry, discharging salt may have been legal.

The green light is expected to be given this Friday for farm animals to be allowed to be watered with Oder water again.

Brandenburg's state government is examining whether affected fishing companies can be compensated for the environmental disaster.

"The corresponding funds would also be available (...), provided that this is legally impeccable," says Vogel.

Brandenburg's Consumer Protection Minister Ursula Nonnemacher (Greens) had previously said that no legal right to compensation could be derived from European food law: the state government was aware that the fishermen's livelihoods were at risk.

Prime Minister Dietmar Woidke (SPD) announced that he would talk to those affected and explore solutions.

It is about twelve fishing companies on the Oder.

The scientific director of the Institute for Inland Fisheries, Uwe Brämick, had described the losses of the companies as drastic.

"We assume that it will take two to four years before the potential of the stocks has developed again as it was before this development," said Brämick.

In the Oder, around 50 to 60 tons of fish would normally be caught by the twelve companies, which earn 80 percent of their revenues from it.

Anglers take just as many tons out of the river every year.

Nonnemacher said that as long as it has not been clarified what led to the fish kill, no permission for fishing in the river can be granted.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-08-31

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