Marine Pollution; The New Epidemic

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Relevant stakeholders must take immediate action to combat marine pollution in the Caribbean to shift the OECS Member States to a Circular and Blue Economy.

 

Caribbean Islands have been crowned the world’s worst plastic polluters, producing four times the amount of plastic waste per person than China in 2019! According to World Bank data, uncollected plastic in Caribbean countries amounts to over 300,000 tons per year, while the United Nations Environment Program marine cleanup data recovered over 3 million plastic trash pieces over an area of fewer than 3000 kilometers from 2006 to 2012.  Eighty percent of marine pollution results from the emission of solids and liquids from land-based sources such as agricultural runoff, and infrastructure and wastewater has been found to be one of the largest sources of marine pollution, with the majority of this pollutant going untreated into the Caribbean ocean.

 

The OECS Islands are not only small-island nations, but  are large ocean states.

The ocean keeps Caribbean economies afloat, supplying food and jobs for the region’s residents. Economic activities like fishing, shipping, communications, tourism, and recreation are all aided by it. The economic value of these services is estimated to be in the billions therefore the ocean can be considered as one of the Caribbean’s most valuable assets, and it has the potential to contribute to the region’s growth and development. Understanding and managing marine pollution concerns in the region is thus not just a concern for the environment, but also a matter of economic and social importance.

 

gcaptain.com

 

The Blue Economy offers opportunities to aid the Caribbean to realize its full potential for aquatic resources by fostering secure and resilient coastal communities, maintaining healthy and productive seas, and fostering inclusive and sustainable economic growth.

The concept of a Blue Economy considers the ecosystems that provide so many of the services associated with the ocean economy to be underlying natural capital assets (for example, fish stocks and beaches).

 

Policy frameworks and industries that can expand the blue economy are increasingly emerging. As a basis for the transition to a blue economy, governments and development partners have initiated a variety of regional efforts to better measure and protect the Caribbean Sea’s natural wealth. For instance, the GEF has supported the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP )’s Large Marine Ecosystem (CLME) Project since 2009, which aims to better assess the state of the region’s ecological systems and natural capital, as well as to support policy recommendations for conservation. A Caribbean Waste Management Action Plan, developed by Caribbean ministers, presently includes more than ten Caribbean islands, with the goal of minimizing plastic waste. Single-use plastics are now prohibited in Antigua and Barbuda, Jamaica and Saint Lucia, just to name a few.

 

today.caricom.org

In collaboration with Ministries of Environment and Sustainable Development in Islands which are a part of the OECS, New activities in the area of Ocean Governance and Blue Economy are continually being developed in the Eastern Caribbean by the OECS Commission’s Ocean Governance and Fisheries Unit.

The Caribbean Regional Oceanscape Initiative (CROP), a five-year project aimed at stimulating the growth of the blue economy in the Eastern Caribbean, is one of the projects recently launched by the OECS Commission in addition to The Building Resilience in the Eastern Caribbean through Marine Litter Reduction Project which will run from 2018 to 2022. (ReMLIT).

The ReMLit Project is enabling change, with the OECS Commission at the frontlines of the action plan to shift OECS Member States to a Blue Economy, by improving and harmonizing waste management policy and legislation, helping to educate for waste behavior change, and offering support to enforce concrete interventions on the ground to reduce marine litter at the country level.

If nothing is done about marine pollution, the Caribbean economy would suffer from the aesthetic degradation of its natural resources such as beaches and mangroves. This might lead to decreasing tourist visitation rates, which would have ramifications beyond the tourism industry. It will have a detrimental economic impact on the remainder of the Caribbean territory. Furthermore, increased marine pollution would stimulate mosquito breeding, which might spread dangerous viruses and render the Caribbean area more vulnerable to infectious illnesses. The degradation of marine ecosystems such as coral reefs, mangroves, and seagrass beds poses a significant threat to workers employed in tourism and fisheries, as well as storm and hurricane defence. Even though the Caribbean Region has experienced a growth in awareness of marine pollution, there is still a lack of understanding of the sources and impacts of this issue. However, given the absence of information and clarity, governments need to act immediately.

Significant progress has been achieved in establishing policy frameworks and agreements to combat marine pollution within the Caribbean region.   However, teamwork between the people, government and businesses within the Region is required to further tackle the problem.

It is undeniable that combating marine pollution is a primary concern in terms of the environment and will pose a serious danger to the region’s development and the people’s quality of life.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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5 COMMENTS

  1. Most Antiguans are the very worst offenders…constantly see them throw garbage out the window of cars, or leaving plastic bottles and wrappers down at the beach. Zero s***s given. Disgusting behavior.

  2. What are you talking about? See those cruise ships and yachts and merchant boats in the Caribbean, exploiting the security lapses of third world garbage disposal failure, adding to it by illegal dumping in our seas which wash onto our shores. On shore is disgusting too but who are the ‘Antiguans’ – unfortunately now that refers to Europeans, Americans, Chinese, Caribbean Nationals and a multitude of CIP persons! Are those the persons of whom you speak?

  3. Good luck with that. Most people here people don’t give a shit. They continue to rape our natural resources, kill off our marine life (man hafa nyam to lib) and pollute our coastal waters and lands. Then they want to know why dem a get cancer and other fatal conditions. When all the marine life fish out and our polluted lands poison us, I want to hear them say, man hafa nyam. Now they can nyam air and food from our polluted surroundings.

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