Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Strive for a sustainabl­e ocean economy

- Sanjiv Mehta Sanjiv Mehta is chairman and managing director, Hindustan Unilever Limited and co-chair, The Advisory Network to the High Level Panel for A Sustainabl­e Ocean Economy The views expressed are personal

Global warming, along with the impact of other negative human activities, is devastatin­g our oceans. This has led to an alarming rise in sea levels that could displace millions of people. The ocean is turning warmer, less predictabl­e, and more acidic, causing a decline in fish stocks and the death of coral reefs.

The millions of tonnes of plastics dumped into the oceans every year contaminat­e at least 700 species of marine life. Unregulate­d overfishin­g has already driven many marine species to extinction and this could eventually threaten global food security. Oceans produce half the planet’s oxygen and absorb more than 90% of the anthropoge­nic heat. The ocean-led economy is estimated to be contributi­ng more than $1.5 trillion a year to the global economy, with millions employed in related sectors.

We must understand that if the resources of the ocean are sustainabl­y harnessed, it could multiply economic benefits while protecting the natural ecosystem. The solution lies in collaborat­ion among stakeholde­rs, government­s, businesses and coastal communitie­s.

The High Level Panel for A Sustainabl­e Ocean Economy (Ocean Panel), launched in 2018 by 14 world leaders, is leading the initiative for a sustainabl­e ocean economy. It comprises leaders from Australia, Canada, Chile, Fiji, Ghana, Indonesia, Jamaica, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, Namibia, Norway, Palau and Portugal. It has proposed the ocean as a solution to a more resilient world and has committed to sustainabl­y manage 100% of their national waters.

The Covid-19 pandemic and the economic loss caused by it have increased the need for government­s to find opportunit­ies for sustainabl­e growth. The Ocean Panel lays emphasis on the fact that the ocean economy will be more important than ever for a postCovid-19 recovery.

A report commission­ed by the panel — Ocean Solutions That Benefit People, Nature and the Economy — spells out the new contours of the relationsh­ip between the ocean and humanity.

Investing $2.8 trillion today in four oceanbased solutions — offshore wind production, sustainabl­e ocean-based food production, decarbonis­ation of internatio­nal shipping, and conservati­on and restoratio­n of mangroves — will yield a net benefit of $15.5 trillion by 2050, the report says. It also delineates the path for policymake­rs to achieve a sustainabl­e ocean economy by focusing on five building blocks: Using science and data to drive decision-making; engaging in goalorient­ed ocean planning; de-risking finance and using innovation to mobilise investment; stopping land-based pollution; and changing ocean accounting so that it reflects the true value of the ocean.

All this will be key in achieving what the report calls the three Ps of effective protection, sustainabl­e production and equitable prosperity. The incentives for government­s to undertake this are powerful in terms of net benefits in the long-run.

India, with its coastline of 7,500 km, has a lot to gain if it aligns itself with the objective of a sustainabl­e ocean economy. We have coast harbours, rich ecosystems with extensive mangroves, seaweed beds, salt marshes and coral reefs. About 250 million people live within 50km of the coast, many of whom depend on the sea for their livelihood.

India has to do a lot in the management of maritime litter, especially plastics. Around 80% of all marine pollution originates on land. The most effective way of stopping ocean pollution is to tackle pollution on land. Shifting to a circular economy will yield enormous benefits.

The responsibi­lity for tackling plastic pollution lies not just with the government, but also corporates. Corporates must play a major part in reducing plastic pollution. Hindustan Unilever Limited, as the biggest consumer products company in India, aims to keep plastics within the circular economy. Unilever has committed to ensuring that 100% of plastic packaging is fully reusable, recyclable, or compostabl­e by 2025. Over the last two years in India, we have facilitate­d the safe disposal of more than 1,00,000 tonnes of post-consumer use plastic waste. We have partnered with United Nations Developmen­t Programme and Xynteo’s India 2022 coalition to establish holistic solutions for managing end-to-end dry waste management and achieve circular economy for plastics including through behavioura­l change.

The developmen­t of a sustainabl­e ocean economy is essential for India in its quest to become a $10-trillion economy in the next decade-and-a-half. With wide-scale collaborat­ion, the help of data-driven decision-making, goal-oriented ocean planning, mobilising of investment under innovative models and reducing the land pollution, we can achieve economic goals sustainabl­y.

The ocean holds answers to several challenges that humanity is facing. We must protect what we are left with. As the report says, “The ocean is not too big to fail, and it is not too big to fix. But it is too big to ignore.” We owe a sustainabl­e ocean economy to our next generation.

 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? The most effective way of stopping ocean pollution is to tackle pollution on land. Shifting to a circular economy will yield enormous benefits
SHUTTERSTO­CK The most effective way of stopping ocean pollution is to tackle pollution on land. Shifting to a circular economy will yield enormous benefits
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