Union Earth Sciences ministry to study marine litter issue: Official

India had joined the United Nations’ ‘Clean Seas’ programme to monitor marine pollution

Updated - June 11, 2018 02:46 pm IST - Panaji

 People swim in the Arabian Sea as plastic waste is seen strewn on Juhu Chowpatty Beach, in Mumbai

People swim in the Arabian Sea as plastic waste is seen strewn on Juhu Chowpatty Beach, in Mumbai

The Union Ministry of Earth Sciences will begin work on gauging marine litter and their sources along the country’s coastline, a senior ministry official said on June 11.

M Rajeevan, Secretary, Ministry of Earth Sciences said that the country had joined the United Nations’ ‘Clean Seas’ programme and the ministry’s Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services and another Chennai-based institute would work on the field of marine litter.

“Recent talk is about marine litter. People talk about marine plastic, marine micro plastic. We have already joined the UNs Clean Seas programme and we will be starting a new activity on marine litter,” Rajeevan told reporters on the sidelines of the India-USA colloquium which began today at the National Institute of Oceanography, Goa.

Pollution prediction systems

Calling marine pollution a serious national problem, Rajeevan said that his ministry was working with the USA to develop an emergency alert system to predict air pollution emergencies. “Along the coast we have had a programme to measure sea water quality. We have been doing it for over 25 years at 25 places. It has shown good results and we now know where water quality is poor or good,” he informed.

Craig McLean, Acting Chief Scientist of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), USA, said that plastic pollution is an important problem across the world. “We have many countries, governments and the private sector offering commitments on how to protect the future of mankind and the oceans,” he said. McLean said that the situation was changing with plastic manufacturers and consumers talking about using recyclable plastic. “It gives a great deal of optimism with such kind of change. It is about how we can optimise and reuse plastic,” he added.

India and the US had signed a Memorandum of Understanding in 2008 to have scientific and technical cooperation in Earth observations and Earth sciences.

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