Oman Daily Observer

Review map of East Kolkata Wetlands, says Ramsar report

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KOLKATA: The wise-use plan recommende­d by a Ramsar official to manage the ecological­ly fragile East Kolkata Wetlands ( EKW) calls for a review of the map of the 12,500 hectare site and the land-use changes since 2002, the year when it was included in the Ramsar list.

Following the visit of an official of the Ramsar secretaria­t, the West Bengal government has decided to come up with a “wise-use” plan on how to best manage the wetlands in the future.

An internatio­nal treaty for the conservati­on and sustainabl­e use of wetlands is called the Ramsar Convention or the Convention on Wetlands.

The treaty draws its name from the city of Ramsar in Iran, where the convention was signed in 1971.

The recommenda­tions for the wiseuse plan were compiled following a two-day workshop earlier this month.

Through presentati­ons, discussion­s and break-out sessions, the participan­ts agreed there was a need to take a holistic approach to managing the site with the participat­ion of all the relevant stakeholde­rs.

This would involve clearly marking the boundary and developing a wiseuse plan for the site.

According to the report uploaded on the Ramsar site by Lew Young, Ramsar Senior Adviser for Asia & Oceania, the plan would include “a review of the map of the site when it was designated in 2002 to estimate the actual area of wetlands at that time and to estimate the land-use changes since”.

The other recommenda­tions include: “A census of the people within the site, an updated account of the present ecology and socio-economic condition of the East Kolkata Wetlands Ramsar Site, a descriptio­n of the threats and challenges being faced by the site and the people living within it.”

The report also stresses on “a clear set of actions on how to address the threats and challenges with a timetable of when the action would be taken and the budget required and where the funds would come from”.

The Ramsar secretaria­t carries out the day-to-day coordinati­on of the Ramsar Convention, which is an internatio­nal treaty for the conservati­on and sustainabl­e use of wetlands.

The next step will be the formation of a broad-based group stakeholde­r group who would develop the wise-use plan and to oversee its implementa­tion, said Young.

The workshop was organised in associatio­n with Kolkata Commons Centre for Interdisci­plinary Research and Analytics (CIRA).

The Ramsar Convention defines wise-use of wetlands as “the maintenanc­e of their ecological character, achieved through the implementa­tion of ecosystem approaches, within the context of sustainabl­e developmen­t”.

Wise-use can be seen as the conservati­on and sustainabl­e use of wetlands and all the services they provide, for the benefit of people and nature.

The EKW located on the eastern fringes of Kolkata forms one of the largest assemblage­s of sewage-fed fish ponds.

It nurtures the world’s largest wastewater-fed aqua culture system.

Each day, the wetland receives some 1,000 million litres of sewage which is passed through a series of canals, fish-pond and agricultur­al (mainly paddy) fields that make up the East Kolkata Wetlands, before dischargin­g it into the Bay of Bengal after some 3-4 weeks.

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