There are three main reasons for the repeated damage of marine buoys: firstly, the awareness of buoy protection needs to be improved; secondly, the difficulty of maritime supervision; and thirdly, the lack of joint protection of marine observation facilities. Safety measures for ocean buoys: Continuously increasing publicity and popularization efforts; Continue to strengthen maritime supervision; Form a joint force for buoy supervision.
Reasons for repeated damage to ocean buoys
With the continuous improvement of legal awareness among fishery producers, intentional damage to ocean buoys has significantly decreased. However, it is inevitable that unintentional damage will still occur, and it is necessary to further strengthen awareness of protecting ocean observation equipment. In addition, due to the large ocean area, management is difficult. Sometimes when regulatory agencies discover destructive behavior, the perpetrator has already disappeared, making it difficult to track it in a timely manner.
Safety measures for marine buoys
1. Continue to strengthen science popularization and publicity efforts. Coastal local governments and marine management institutions should strengthen the scientific publicity of national marine public facilities, especially the regulations on marine observation and prediction management, to make everyone aware that protecting marine buoys is an obligation, raise public awareness of the protection of marine observation equipment, and recognize the importance of marine environmental monitoring work.
2. Continue to strengthen maritime supervision. Cases of damaging marine facilities have been sentenced, which serve as a warning but have not fundamentally solved the problem of intentional damage to marine observation equipment. Law enforcement agencies should strengthen maritime law enforcement, focus on inspecting and enforcing maritime observation equipment, and resolutely investigate and crack down on buoy damage. At the same time, relevant departments should also set up signs in prominent positions of buoys, strengthen daily management, and prevent the occurrence of damage to marine buoys.
3. Form a joint force for buoy supervision. Marine buoys are managed by multiple departments according to their categories, involving natural resources, ecological environment, meteorology, maritime affairs, fisheries, etc. We should actively explore and implement the "one standard, multiple capabilities" construction, which has formed a joint department, shared use, management, sharing, and protection model among multiple departments. At the institutional level, we should form a joint force for management and use, and jointly protect offshore observation facilities.
The protection of marine buoys requires multiple approaches, forming a pattern of joint management by law enforcement agencies, management departments, and local governments.
The above is an introduction to the causes of damage to ocean buoys and safety measures, hoping to help everyone.