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ENVIRONMENT

Mar Menor: How nutrients have poisoned Spain’s largest saltwater lagoon

"I am in love with this sea. I live for it and I live off it. If they took it away from me, I would die," says Pedro Martinez-Banos, gazing out across the sparkling waters of Spain's Mar Menor.

Mar Menor: How nutrients have poisoned Spain's largest saltwater lagoon
Pictures by Jorge Guerrero and video by Maud Watine

A fisherman all his life, this 50-year-old father-of-three grew up along the shores of the so-called Small Sea in the southeastern coastal region of Murcia, casting out his nets to bring in a catch to support his family.

It had been a very good year for him, his small boat bringing in about 100 kilos per day. But that all changed on October 12th when millions of fish and crustaceans washed up on the Mar Menor's northern shores, dead or dying.

“It is the worst thing that can happen to a fisherman, the worst thing your eyes can see — a catastrophe,” he recalled heavily. “It was like someone was dying, as if you yourself were dying.”

Many people were in tears that day as the Mar Menor spat out the sealife that had been thriving there, in a huge blow to this coastal lagoon whose warm climate and sandy beaches have proven a major tourism draw, earning it the nickname “the jewel in the crown”.   

Beneath the calm of one of Europe's largest saltwater lagoons, whose coastline stretches some 70 kilometres (45 miles), a toxic storm has long been brewing, the product of years of nutrient pollution from intensive agriculture and rampant urban development.   

Experts say the fish died of suffocation, caused by a phenomenon known as eutrophication, an environmental hazard that causes aquatic ecosystems to collapse due to a lack of oxygen in the water.

With scientists warning that global warming is set to increase such phenomena, it is a topic likely to be on the agenda at the UN climate change summit in Madrid.

'Chronicle of a death foretold'

“What happened in October was triggered by the high levels of contamination going into the lagoon over decades, predominantly from intensive agriculture,” said Oscar Esparza, head of Marine Protected Areas at World Wildlife Fund
(WWF) Spain.   

For years, runoff water loaded with nitrates has entered the lagoon causing a vast bloom of algae which, as it died and began decomposing, decreased the amount of oxygen in the depths, creating a pocket of toxic anoxic — or oxygen-free — water that wiped out everything living there.   

When a major storm hit in September, it triggered a process that saw the anoxic layer rising to the surface, forcing fish and crustaceans to flee for their lives.

READ ALSO: Satellite images reveal how the worst storms in Spain in 140 years have flooded the land

“What we saw went beyond the worst we could ever have imagined — death on a massive scale,” said Pedro Garcia, director of regional conservation organisation ANSE, warning it could happen again.

Nobody thought such a thing could happen in Mar Menor, but the scientific community had been warning about it for decades, Esparza said, describing it as “the chronicle of a death foretold.”

Most of the nutrients seeped in from the Campo de Cartagena, a vast area of intensive agriculture which has grown tenfold over the past 40 years and today covers between 50,000 and 60,000 hectares (124,000 to 148,000 acres).

“The Campo de Cartagena is very warm in winter and can produce two, three or in some cases even four crops per year,” Garcia told AFP, saying such intensive agriculture “needs a large quantity of fertiliser”.

Farmers defiant

But agricultural groups insist they are not responsible for the crisis.   

“The sector is not producing any type of contamination,” said Vicente Carrion, regional head of the COAG farmers' association, saying all processes were “fully compliant” with environmental legislation.

Farmers also had to analyse the soil every year “to ensure nitrogen deposits are not passing a certain level of enrichment,” he told AFP, saying the sector “does not deserve to be criminalised the way it has been” over the Mar Menor.

The regional government has also come under fire, with conservationists accusing it of failing to enforce laws to protect the Mar Menor and “looking the other way” when it came to the rampant but profitable growth of intensive agriculture and development.   

However Miriam Perez (above), the regional official in charge of the Mar Menor, dismissed the allegation, pointing to eight emergency measures to protect, monitor and regenerate the lagoon.

“We are confident the Mar Menor will recover,” she told AFP. “Although it's weak at the moment, its ecosystem is actually very strong and is able to regenerate itself. Obviously, after what happened with the storm, it needs a bit of time.”   

The authorities have removed 1,800 tonnes of debris from the waters, which have cleared noticeably, and those fisherman who went back to sea last month have caught fish, but less than half the usual amount.

Warning for the Mediterranean?   

Researchers say the problems caused by nutrient pollution will not be resolved overnight, and that, agricultural models must change to address it.   

“Eutrophication is a very important issue, the cost for ecosystems and for the environment is huge,” said Chantal Gascuel, senior scientist at INRA, France's National Institute for Agricultural Research.

“Decreasing nitrogen and phosphorus emissions is very important, so agriculture has to change. This is our message: the system has to be changed to significantly decrease emissions,” she told AFP.

For the Mar Menor, that means reducing the pace of regional economic development and intensive agriculture to lower nitrate flows, WWF's Esparza said.

And it should sound a warning for other maritime zones.   

“What happened here in the Mar Menor could happen within 50 years in the rest of the Mediterranean,” he warned, saying both were closed, confined seas suffering from intense human pressure and a lot of contamination.

“It's the same, just on a different scale.”

By AFP's Hazel Ward

READ MORE: Why have thousands of dead fish washed up in southern Spain?

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ENVIRONMENT

Sweden’s SSAB to build €4.5bn green steel plant in Luleå 

The Swedish steel giant SSAB has announced plans to build a new steel plant in Luleå for 52 billion kronor (€4.5 billion), with the new plant expected to produce 2.5 million tons of steel a year from 2028.

Sweden's SSAB to build €4.5bn green steel plant in Luleå 

“The transformation of Luleå is a major step on our journey to fossil-free steel production,” the company’s chief executive, Martin Lindqvist, said in a press release. “We will remove seven percent of Sweden’s carbon dioxide emissions, strengthen our competitiveness and secure jobs with the most cost-effective and sustainable sheet metal production in Europe.”

The new mini-mill, which is expected to start production at the end of 2028 and to hit full capacity in 2029, will include two electric arc furnaces, advanced secondary metallurgy, a direct strip rolling mill to produce SSABs specialty products, and a cold rolling complex to develop premium products for the transport industry.

It will be fed partly from hydrogen reduced iron ore produced at the HYBRIT joint venture in Gälliväre and partly with scrap steel. The company hopes to receive its environemntal permits by the end of 2024.

READ ALSO: 

The announcement comes just one week after SSAB revealed that it was seeking $500m in funding from the US government to develop a second HYBRIT manufacturing facility, using green hydrogen instead of fossil fuels to produce direct reduced iron and steel.

The company said it also hoped to expand capacity at SSAB’s steel mill in Montpelier, Iowa. 

The two new investment announcements strengthen the company’s claim to be the global pioneer in fossil-free steel.

It produced the world’s first sponge iron made with hydrogen instead of coke at its Hybrit pilot plant in Luleå in 2021. Gälliväre was chosen that same year as the site for the world’s first industrial scale plant using the technology. 

In 2023, SSAB announced it would transform its steel mill in Oxelösund to fossil-free production.

The company’s Raahe mill in Finland, which currently has new most advanced equipment, will be the last of the company’s big plants to shift away from blast furnaces. 

The steel industry currently produces 7 percent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions, and shifting to hydrogen reduced steel and closing blast furnaces will reduce Sweden’s carbon emissions by 10 per cent and Finland’s by 7 per cent.

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