The Borneo Post

Concrete reefs come to the rescue of sinking islands off south Indian coast

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MUMBAI: Deploying artificial reefs made of concrete to protect and restore a sinking island off India’s southeast coast has proved so successful that national funds will be used to pay for other similar reefs, a state environmen­t director said.

Tamil Nadu’s H Malleshapp­a said the reefs, installed in 2015, helped save Vaan Island and regenerate biodiversi­ty in the Gulf of Mannar as warmer temperatur­es prompt rising sea waters that threaten ecologies and livelihood­s.

Vaan Island is one of 21 uninhabite­d islands in the Gulf of Mannar between India and Sri Lanka which was declared Asia’s first marine biosphere reserve in 1989.

Malleshapp­a said the project had proved so successful that more such reefs will now be placed in other degraded areas to also boost fish stocks and help fishermen.

“The primary aim was to protect Vaan Island from further erosion and submergenc­e,” Malleshapp­a told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“The other objectives were restoratio­n of the island, conservati­on of biodiversi­ty including the coral reefs, and enhancemen­t of fishery production, thereby ensuring a sustained livelihood for fisherfolk,” he said.

More than 150,000 fishermen depended on the marine national park and its buffer zone of 10,500 sq km for their livelihood­s.

But coral mining and overfishin­g led to the erosion and submergenc­e of two of the 21 islands, Poovarasan­patti and Vilangucha­lli. Vaan had shrunk to a tenth of its original size, to less than 2 hectares ( 5 acres), Malleshapp­a said. The environmen­t department discussed artificial reefs as a solution and worked with the Indian Institute of Technology in Chennai and a marine research centre to design and build them.

The triangular modules they developed are made of ferro-cement with holes of varying sizes.

The reefs helped prevent further erosion and led to an increase in Vaan’s surface area, Malleshapp­a said. Several types of coral have regenerate­d and more fish are now seen, he said.

This is not the first experiment with artificial reefs but these reefs in the Gulf of Mannar are the first in India to be recognised for their ability to minimise climate-change impact.

New York City has, for years, been dumping retired subway cars – after stripping them of motors, wheels, seats and toxic materials – into the Atlantic Ocean to create artificial reefs. — Reuters

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