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Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 29 March 2022


Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 29 March 2022


Contents

  1. A subregional grouping that must get back on course
  2. The phenomenon of Coral Bleaching

A Subregional Grouping That Must Get Back on Course


Context

Leaders of Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation (BIMSTEC) will attend a summit meeting hosted by the chair Sri Lanka. They look to turn their aspirations into actions in the Bay of Bengal (BoB) region.

Relevance

GS-II: Bilateral, Regional and Global Groupings and Agreements involving India and/or affecting India’s interests.

Dimensions of the Article

  • About BIMSTEC
  • About Bay of Bengal Marine Dialogue (BoBMD)
  • Marine Ecosystem and Resource Potential of BoB
  • Need for regional interaction
  • Priority Area: Marine Environment
  • Addressing the issues of Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing (IUU)
  • Way Forward

About BIMSTEC

  • Founded in 1997
  • 7 members – India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Bhutan and Nepal
  • Summits have been full of communiqués and aspirations but no concrete action.
  • Upcoming summit is an opportunity to address the critical challenges confronting the region.

About Bay of Bengal Marine Dialogue (BoBMD)

  • Organized by Centre for humanitarian Assistance and Pathfinder
  • Participants called for stepping up efforts in the area of – environmental protection, scientific research, curtailing IUU fishing, developing protocols for cross border violations by fishermen, etc.

Marine Ecosystem and Resource Potential of BoB

  • Home to a large network of beautiful bur fragile estuaries, mangrove forests, coral reefs, sea grass meadows and mass nesting sites of turtles.
  • Annual fish catch is of around 6 Million Tonnes.
  • However, it is threatened by climate change, unsustainable fishing, emergence of dead zones, leaching of microplastics, terrorism and piracy and tensions among nations.

Need for regional interaction

  • Blue Economy potential of BoB is huge which can be tapped into by improved regional interaction.
  • Opportunities to develop maritime trade, shipping, aquaculture and tourism.
  • This is possible only with concerted efforts and coordination among the countries.
  • BIMSTEC can provide a new mechanism for transboundary interaction.
  • Limited interaction among countries is hampering sustainable utilization.

Priority Area: Marine Environment

  • Home grown solutions are needed based on capabilities of various nations to deepen their engagements.
  • Need to create regional frameworks for data collection.
  • Participatory approaches must be evolved to create a regional open fisheries data alliance.
  • BoB Programme and BoB Marine Ecosystem should get full support of BIMSTEC.

Addressing the issues of Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing (IUU)

  • Equipping fishing vessels with AIS trackers.
  • Establishing a regional fishing vessel registry system.
  • Increasing monitoring, control and surveillance to prevent IUU practices.
  • Developmental and upliftment programs must be implemented for fishing.
  • Laws and policies must be harmonized for better treatment of fisherman crossing the borders.

Way Forward

BIMSTEC must arise, awake and act before its too late. Countries have the capability both in capital and human resources terms which they must invest in a planned and coordinated manner to harness the potential of BoB ecosystem. They must also address the issues related to climate change and adopt sustainable methodologies.

Source – The Hindu


The Phenomenon of Coral Bleaching


Context

The management authority of the world’s largest coral reef system, Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, confirmed on March 25 that the reef is experiencing a mass coral bleaching event.

Relevance

GS-III: Conservation, Environmental Pollution and Degradation, Environmental Impact Assessment.

Dimensions of the Article

  • What are Coral Reefs?
  • How do they feed themselves?
  • What is Coral Bleaching?
  • Impact of Climate Change
  • Significance of Corals

What are Coral Reefs?

  • Corals are marine invertebrates or animals not possessing a spine.
  • Each coral is called a polyp and thousands of such polyps live together to form a colony, which grows when polyps multiply to make copies of themselves.
  • Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is the world’s largest reef system stretching across 2,300 km.
  • It hosts 400 different types of coral, gives shelter to 1,500 species of fish and 4,000 types of mollusc.
  • Corals are of two types — hard coral and soft coral:
  • Hard corals, also called hermatypic or ‘reef building’ corals extract calcium carbonate (also found in limestone) from the seawater to build hard, white coral exoskeletons.
  • Soft coral polyps, however, borrow their appearance from plants, attach themselves to such skeletons and older skeletons built by their ancestors. Soft corals also add their own skeletons to the hard structure over the years and these growing multiplying structures gradually form coral reefs. They are the largest living structures on the planet.

How do they feed themselves?

  • Corals share a symbiotic relationship with single-celled algae called zooxanthellae.
  • The algae provides the coral with food and nutrients, which they make through photosynthesis, using the sun’s light.
  • In turn, the corals give the algae a home and key nutrients.
  • The zooxanthellae also give corals their bright colour.

What is Coral Bleaching?

  • Bleaching happens when corals experience stress in their environment due to changes in temperature, pollution or high levels of ocean acidity.
  • Under stressed conditions, the zooxanthellae or food-producing algae living inside coral polyps start producing reactive oxygen species, which are not beneficial to the corals.
  • So, the corals expel the colour-giving zooxanthellae from their polyps, which exposes their pale white exoskeleton, giving the corals a bleached appearance.
  • This also ends the symbiotic relationship that helps the corals to survive and grow.
  • Severe bleaching and prolonged heat stress in the external environment can lead to coral death.

Impact of Climate Change

  • Over the last couple of decades, climate change and increased global warming owing to rising carbon emissions and other greenhouse gases have made seas warmer than usual.
  • Under all positive outlooks and projections in terms of cutting greenhouse gases, sea temperatures are predicted to increase by 1.5°C to 2°C by the time the century nears its end.
  • The first mass bleaching event had occurred in 1998 when the El Niño weather pattern caused sea surfaces in the pacific ocean to heat up; this event caused 8% of the world’s coral to die.
  • The second event took place in 2002.
  • In the past decade, however, mass bleaching occurrences have become more closely spaced in time, with the longest and most damaging bleaching event taking place from 2014 to 2017.

Significance of Corals

  • Coral reefs support over 25% of marine biodiversity, including fish, turtles and lobsters; even as they only take up 1% of the seafloor.
  • The marine life supported by reefs further fuels global fishing industries. Even giant clams and whales depend on the reefs to live.
  • Besides, coral reef systems generate $2.7 trillion in annual economic value through goods and service trade and tourism.
  • In Australia, the Barrier Reef, in pre-COVID times, generated $4.6 billion annually through tourism and employed over 60,000 people including divers and guides.
  • Aside from adding economic value and being a support system for aquatic life, coral reefs also provide protection from storm waves.
  • Dead reefs can revive over time if there are enough fish species that can graze off the weeds that settle on dead corals, but it takes almost a decade for the reef to start setting up again

Source – The Hindu


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