Sargassum Seaweed
On my flights down to the Leeward Islands via Puerto Rico two weeks ago I noticed large lines of the seaweed everywhere again in the seas.
So this article today in Diario Libre about Boca Chica being clogged up with the seaweed was not all together suprising, but the sheer amount in the photo near the marina did shock me.
Perhaps another bad year is in stall?
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Sargassum: a continuing challenge
It was not to be. A ‘Sargassum Summit’ to develop a multinational response to the worsening problem of the sargassum seaweed washing up on some of the best beaches in the Caribbean, has had to be postponed.
The conference in Cancun, which has been delayed for domestic political reasons, is now expected to take place at a later date. Then Mexico’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs will bring together representatives from government, the private sector, and experts from the Caribbean, Central America and the US to discuss how best to respond to the effect that the environmental phenomena is having on tourism and fisheries, and its damaging economic consequences.
Sargassum, of course, is a type of abundant seaweed creating ocean rafts that stretch for miles. Although ecologically important and a floating habitat for multiple forms of marine life, when carried onshore by prevailing tides and winds it builds up in the form of a rotting mass of foul-smelling vegetation.
In the past it was largely believed to originate in the Sargasso Sea in the West Atlantic. More recently however, scientists believe that it has started to arrive in the Caribbean from the equatorial waters between Brazil and West Africa, where sea temperatures are rising as a result of climate change, and where pesticide and fertiliser runoff from the Amazon and Congo rivers is causing it to proliferate.
So serious has the problem become that a recent MIT Technology Review suggested that the cumulative effect is beginning to disrupt the equilibrium of coastal ecosystems and by killing off the seagrasses that help keep sand in place, is causing beaches to erode more rapidly.
There are indications that the Caribbean may again see this year unusually large amounts of sargassum seaweed washed up on its shores. In recent days large quantities have begun to arrive on Mexico’s south eastern Caribbean coast, with forecasters suggesting that as the year goes on the rest of the region may also suffer.
According to a report produced by the University of South Florida Optical Oceanography Lab, its satellite ocean mapping showed in April large amounts of sargassum across much of the Caribbean Sea except in the nearshore waters of Venezuela and Columbia, and in quantities higher than the historical record set in 2018 for the same month.
Its analysis suggested that this could mean that while ‘the exact sargassum amount, timing, and location of the beaching will depend on local ocean circulations and winds’ the volume in the Caribbean Sea in May-June 2019 may be ‘comparable to or even higher than in May-June 2018, a historical record’.
Although sargassum has been arriving in the Caribbean for many years, its mass has now become so great that voluntary efforts to clean beaches are proving ineffective, with potentially longer term negative economic consequences for tourism in particular.
Tourism Ministers and industry representatives indicate they have become increasingly concerned about the seaweed’s unsightly appearance, visitor complaints, the cost of mechanical removal, and the possibility of reputational damage. There is also some anecdotal evidence of investors questioning the long-term cost implications in relation to projects they are engaged in.
To try to address the issue, the University of the West Indies and a number of other regional and international bodies have been exploring possible solutions including industrial or nutritional uses for the seaweed if processed, issues related to the ecological damage to beaches caused by the use of heavy machinery to clear the sargassum, and what if any technical solutions there may be to keep the seaweed offshore.
One suggestion is that the seaweed should be harvested. A United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) white paper published in October 2018 indicated a variety of uses including as fertiliser, as an input for nutraceuticals, or for biomass, biogas or other purposes.
Although some enterprises have begun to take advantage of sargassum in this way, for example in St Lucia for fertiliser, sustainability paradoxically is an issue, as there is no guarantee that the seaweed will always be available onshore in the required quantities.
An alternative but costly defensive solution being considered by several countries in the region is the installation of barriers. These, it is suggested, might keep the seaweed from reaching the shore in a manner that will result in the ocean currents then carrying the sargassum back out to sea.
In addition, the Caribbean Regional Fisheries Mechanism announced earlier this year that that it had begun a fact-finding study and why in some years such as 2018 it had reached unprecedented levels with an estimated clean-up cost of US$120m. The survey, funded by the Japan International Cooperation Agency, is expected to suggest actions for the regions fisheries and tourism industry and the scope of support that Japan may provide to help address the problem.
UNEP suggests that the science that causes the annual fluctuation in Sargassum blooms is not well understood and that what is now required is multilateral and multiagency collaboration. It has also proposed a regional early warning system; a remote sensing and ship-based monitoring protocol to report sargassum; greater awareness of the link to climate change; the need for a regional response plan and research agenda; and a greater focus on possible uses: all of which will necessitate new resources.
If the problem of sargassum does occur again this year in the same way as it did in 2018 it will also require clear and sustained visitor messaging by the industry and governments, indicating that such inundations are sporadic, do not affect all beaches and there is much more for a visitor to do.
As the oceans warm, the Sargassum problem may well become more severe, suggesting that a regional technical response will be required and an understanding of who will meet the likely cost of clean-up operations and the development of longer-term responses. Above all, and as the delayed Cancun conference agenda suggests, what is now essential is joined-up approach to yet another environmental issue that has long term economic and ecological implications for the whole region.
David Jessop is a consultant to the Caribbean Council and can be contacted at
david.jessop@caribbean-council.org
Previous columns can be found at
Recently we saw the problem in Boca Chica and for those driving along Autovia del Este would have seen loads of the seaweed at sea offshre along the stretch to San Pedro to Macoris.
As far as using the seeweed commercially there is now an operating biofuel power station in San Pedro. They are using the sugar cane material which can be seen stockpiled at the plant.
It would appear 2019 could be as bad as last year according to University of South Florida.
Great graphic.
Hope the English translator works - it doesn't and you will have to translate using google chrome right click and translate.
Today the two electrical generating plants in Haina (Itabo 1 and 2) were shut down for periods due to sargassum seaweed clogging the colling water intakes.
At a time when other power plants are non operational and Punta Catalina is not producing power, this only makes the electrical supply situation in the country insufficient still.
Lucky you expats in Punta Cana and Bayahibe, even Las Terrenas and Las Galeras with your own generator companies or plants. In Santo Domingo even on 24/7 circuits we have had some cuts.
Good news on the power supply is that we have more green energy coming online with a wind farm in Monte Cristi (added to the one recently added in Peravia, near Bani) and a solar farm in Azua coming. And the mini hydro plants in San Juan are proving effective.
And that is very said indeed and little political will do I see for a comprehensive solution to the problem.
JR
Without doubt some raw sewage does find it's way into the rivers from local communities, but even if you employ a plumber in rural DR he will always tell you how to build your septic tank and they are there in every campo dwelling in some form. Yes the shacks alongside the rivers in Santo Domingo may be lacking and as a rule I would avoid swimming in river waters in or near near cities. The greatest flow of waste into the seas from rivers is garbage and plastics and of course there will be sediment runoff with fertilizers too.
DR is far from being backward in that regard and being in the tropics is forunate that sewage does get degraded by bacteria far more quickly than in a temperate climate.
If you read the reports potsed in this thread about the growth of sargassum, you will find that fertilizers used in agriculture are major factors and it isn't the small nations that bear the responsibility for the large amount of the weed flowing with the trade wids from the central atlantic and affecting those small nations such as DR.
At least Punta Cana, North Coast resorts and Bayahibe aren't like this.
Just flew back from St Maarten to SDQ and looking down from the turbo prop aircraft I could see the seaweed beginning to pile up on the East Coast near Punta Cana with plenty off shore.
Not nice.
Didn't get pulled over on way home for re-education on driving after a few cold ones. Phew.
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