DOMINICA, Sep 02 (IPS) – In June 2022, swathes of matted, putrid seaweed took over the shores of seashores throughout the Caribbean. It was the worst seaweed inflow reported since 2011, when ocean currents started depositing tons of the brown seaweed, often known as Sargassum, throughout the area, leaving authorities grappling with the extreme ecological and financial fallout.
For the small island of Tobago within the Southern Caribbean, the impacts had been felt throughout sectors and demographics.
“For about six to 9 months of the 12 months, you may have an inflow of Sargassum seaweed showing on our shores. That not solely impacts the fishermen, the resorts and companies within the space, however it additionally impacts the colleges close to the affected seashores,” Managing Director of Recycling Waste and Logistics Restricted, Shawn C Roberts, instructed IPS.
Roberts can be the Coordinator at Tobago Recycling Useful resource Initiative (TRRI), the primary a number of supplies restoration facility in Trinidad and Tobago and a pioneer in inexperienced options to environmental issues like waste administration.
To sort out Tobago’s seaweed woes, Roberts has turned to earthworms. The method is known as vermicomposting and includes the breakdown of natural matter by earthworms and microorganisms.
“It’s a managed decomposition of the seaweed. It’s nature taking good care of nature and to date, it’s serving to to alleviate this annual invasion of seaweed,” he mentioned.
TRRI has launched the Alleviate Sargassum Motion Program. Often called ASAP, program officers arrange cleanup workouts on affected seashores. They then mix the collected sargassum with the earthworms and different natural supplies like shredded cardboard, grass cuttings, and animal manure to generate compost.
Roberts is hoping that different international locations will understand the advantages of vermicomposting for seaweed administration.
“You don’t really want any main capital enter. In case you have your shed, and even bushes and shade, you may construct your compost piles and monitor them. You simply enable the earthworms and different microorganisms like soldier flies to do their job.”
Far-off from shore, sargassum is a crucial sanctuary for marine life. When it’s deposited by the ton alongside coastlines, nevertheless, it turns into a well being and financial nightmare.
The United Nations Surroundings Programme has warned that the sargassum’s manufacturing of hydrogen sulfide erodes air high quality and extended publicity is dangerous, notably for individuals with respiratory points.
“That is detrimental for coastal residents and seashore customers, whether or not native or guests. Seaside customers who reside elsewhere have the choice to keep away from impacted areas, whereas residents could also be unable to keep away from extended publicity,” the UN company mentioned, in a 2021 white paper.
Some international locations, notably tourism-dependent nations like Barbados, spend tens of millions of {dollars} yearly on emergency clean-ups to rid their seashores of rotting seaweed.
Way back to 2015, teachers on the College of the West Indies lamented that it will take ‘US$120 million and greater than 100,000 individuals’ to do away with the sargassum disaster within the Caribbean.
The calamity has spawned innovation, and Roberts’ initiative in Tobago is one in all many throughout the Caribbean.
The College of the West Indies introduced final 12 months that it was spearheading a analysis undertaking to energy automobiles with sargassum seaweed and wastewater gasoline.
The researchers mentioned the initiative might assist Barbados in its aim of changing into fossil gasoline free by 2030, whereas offering aid from the Sargassum seaweed emergency for the tourism sector.
In Saint Lucia, younger biotech entrepreneur Johanan Dujon has been changing sargassum into fertilizers, natural fungicides, and pesticides beneath his Algas Organics model.
For Roberts, whose program began composting in October 2021, the aim for the area must be cost-effective and long-term inexperienced options.
“The flexibility to reap sargassum in an environmentally secure observe is a problem. Fast fixes are pricey. If you’re not cautious, the answer might be very costly and reactive,” he instructed IPS.
“As a lot as you want emergency clean-ups utilizing heavy gear, many authorities wait till the sargassum begins decaying to react. Our method lies in having a deliberate harvesting administration system the place you may have frequently scheduled cleanups. When the sargassum is recent, that’s when you must goal it. Stockpiling creates a backlog that’s harder and has extreme odor. Then it will get overwhelming and impacts us all.”
In response to researchers on the College of South Florida’s Optical Oceanography Lab which produces month-to-month sargassum bulletins, in July 2022, the quantity of seaweed within the Caribbean Sea was corresponding to the historic excessive of the earlier month.
“This means important beaching occasions are nonetheless ongoing across the Caribbean Sea nations/islands,” the July bulletin said.
“Vermicomposting presents an important alternative for our international locations,” says Roberts. “It permits much less use of handbook labor because it will depend on the microorganisms to work, it’s reasonably priced, and it’s pure.”
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