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Eleven fishermen missing after Ghana vessel sinks
by AFP Staff Writers
Accra (AFP) May 9, 2022

Ghanaian authorities said Monday they had rescued 15 people from a sinking trawler off the country's coast while at least 11 others were still missing, including a Chinese national.

The Ghana-owned but Chinese-operated ship known as MV Comforter II sank on Friday during a storm south of Ghana's second port city Takoradi, 220 kilometres (135 miles) from the capital Accra.

"Official records have it that there were 26 crew members on board... So far, we've rescued 15 people and 11 are still missing," said Paul Bannerman, deputy director at the Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development.

Those missing are 10 Ghanaians and one Chinese, Bannerman told AFP.

"They were fishing in a stormy environment," he said.

An investigation into the incident is underway, he added, along with search and rescue efforts.

The state-owned Ghanaian Times quoted a marine police source saying the fishing vessel capsized.

"The crew was hauling a net which had caught a lot of fish and... there was also a storm and so the weight pulled the vessel the other way, and as they tried to get the fish on board it turned, causing the disaster," the source said.

In Ghana, foreign vessels have to register to the local flag and access the country's waters on local licences.

A 2018 investigation by the Environmental Justice Foundation, a UK-based charity, found that 90 percent of Ghana's industrial fishing fleet had links to Chinese companies.


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WATER WORLD
World's ocean is losing its memory under global warming
Manoa HI (SPX) May 08, 2022
Using future projections from the latest generation of Earth System Models, a recent study published in Science Advances found that most of the world's ocean is steadily losing its year-to-year memory under global warming. Compared with the fast weather fluctuations of the atmosphere, the slowly varying ocean exhibits strong persistence, or "memory", meaning the ocean temperature tomorrow is likely to look a lot like it does today, with only slight changes. As a result, ocean memory is often used ... read more

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