Showing posts with label charitable donations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charitable donations. Show all posts

Monday, June 7, 2010

Stupid humans and poor fish

The 2009/10 financial year ends in 23 days time. NGOs know June’s the peak month when citizens – including Sweetheart Vivienne and me [1] – make charitable donations. So lately the mail’s been loaded with their literature. One leaflet – from the Australian Marine Conservation Society [2] – is simply a list of what it calls ‘The fishing crisis: some facts’. Here are some of those facts:

1. An incredible 80% of the world’s fisheries are overfished, depleted or fished right up to their limit.

2. In 2006 scientists predicted the world’s fisheries could collapse by 2048.

3. Globally bycatch’ (unwanted/unintended catch) is about 20M tonnes a year, or a quarter of the worlds’ annual catch.

4. Orange roughy live up to 150 years and don’t breed until 30 years of age., yet we target these vulnerable fish on their fragile underwater sea-mount habitats with deep sea trawlers.

5. The long lines set globally every year would circle the globe more than 550 times.

6. Over 70M sharks are killed each year for their fins.

7. Each year we feed 14M tonnes of wild-caught fish to pigs and chickens around the globe. That amounts to 17% of all the wild fish we catch.

I don’t know if donating to the AMCS will improve these facts. But there’s no downside. So will we be doing it? You betcha.

Monday, June 23, 2008

farmdoc's blog post number 64

As I wrote last Saturday, I work hard. Therefore my sweetheart Vivienne and I are financially comfortable. One of the consequent joys of being so is donating money to our chosen charities and NGOs – about 20 in all. Each year I resolve to send the donations well before 30 June when the financial year ends. But it never happens; I can’t explain why. But, folks, it’s another exception to the bus stop principle – because as long as the donations are paid by 30 June, they are tax deductible in the current financial year. Yesterday, eight days before 30 June, the bus roared up behind me and I could procrastinate no longer. So with the aphorism The best way to get something done is to begin propelling me on, out came last year’s spreadsheet, the Donations file, and the calculator, chequebook, pen, stapler, envelopes and stamps. The job was done quickly. Surprisingly so. No bother at all. A perspicacious Chinese citizen once said that A journey of a thousand miles starts with the first step. Yeah, yeah, sure, mate; so maybe next year I’ll pay the donations earlier. But equally perspicaciously, another Chinese citizen – or perhaps the same one – said that A one-inch error at the start can be a thousand miles at the end. So maybe I won’t.