Aquarium plan for Koh Chang -
Mar 19,
2004
Koh Chang - a tourist island in Trat province - looks set to undergo a major
facelift with an ambitious development plan that will equip it with piers
for yachts, boat-competition zones, and a huge undersea aquarium.
"The plan should go before the Cabinet within the next two weeks," Thanya
Harnphol, the director of the Special Area (Koh Chang) Development
Organisation, said yesterday.
The permanent secretary of the Natural Resources and Environment Ministry,
Plodprasop Suraswadi, said the planned aquarium would host a huge variety of
fish and plans are for it to be built underwater. "It should attract a
huge number of tourists," he said.
He said power and water utilities on the island would rely on supply from
the mainland through an undersea pipe network. Road improvements would be
implemented, not only to create convenient transport links, but also to
beautify the island, he added.
Plodprasop said the development plan would include city planning focused on
determining the best way for people and nature to co-exist on the island.
"A committee will screen the styles of resorts and hotels to be built on Koh
Chang," he said.
He dismissed reports that he had approved the construction of an incinerator
on the island. "We haven't approved any incinerator or landfill facility,"
he said.
Plodprasop explained that he had approved a garbage-disposal plant that
would turn some of the island's daily output of 10 million tonnes of garbage
into fertiliser.
The plan to build the undersea aquarium attracted scorn from a prominent
academic, who said the construction would not only be useless but also hurt
the environment.
"Tourists to Koh Chang want to experience nature. Who among them would want
to see fish in an aquarium? I wonder if the planned aquarium will be worth
the investment," said Thorn Thamrongnawaswas, a lecturer at Kasetsart
University.
He also pointed out that water around the island was not clear enough for an
aquarium to take advantage of.
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