Thursday, November 13, 2025
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
Ecobuild.club
  • Home
  • Sustainability
  • Insulation
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Eco Build
  • Green Energy
  • Natural Global Resources
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Ecobuild.club
Home Sustainability

Coasts and sea life facing major threat due to massive sand removal

9th September 2023
in Sustainability
0
Coasts and sea life facing major threat due to massive sand removal
0
SHARES
41
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Related posts

Safeguarding clean water access as climate threats rise

10th November 2025

Press Release | World leaders in Doha unite in call to action for more just and inclusive societies 

4th November 2025

This is equivalent to over one million dump trucks every day – placing immense pressure on marine biodiversity and the well-being of coastal communities.

Marine Sand Watch, a platform developed by UN Environment Programme (UNEP)’s analytical centre, GRID-Geneva, uses artificial intelligence and automatic signals from ships to track and monitor sand, clay, silt, gravel, and rock extraction in the world’s marine environments.

It delivers crucial information on sand extraction zones (sand concessions), capital and maintenance dredging sites, sand trading hubs, vessel counts, and operators at sea.

While the platform is a groundbreaking tool, it currently cannot detect artisanal and small-scale mining along shallow coastlines, despite its intensity in some regions, according to UNEP.

Sand, a strategic material

“The scale of environmental impacts of shallow sea mining activities and dredging is alarming, including biodiversity, water turbidity, and noise impacts on marine mammals,” said Pascal Peduzzi, Director of GRID-Geneva at UNEP.  

“This data signals the urgent need for better management of marine sand resources and to reduce the impacts of shallow sea mining,” he added.

The senior UN official called on governments as well as the dredging sector to treat sand as a strategic material, and swiftly engage in talks on how to improve dredging standards worldwide.

Alarming impacts

Between four and eight billion tons of sediment are dredged annually from marine and coastal environments.

This is “perilously” close to the natural replenishment rate of 10 to 16 billion tons per year necessary to sustain coastal and marine ecosystems, according to UNEP.  

While shallow sea mining for sand and gravel is vital for various construction projects, they pose a major threat to coastal communities facing rising sea levels and storms.

Sand extraction also endangers coastal and seabed ecosystems, impacting marine biodiversity, nutrients from the sea and noise pollution, as well as impacting aquifer salinization and future tourism development, UNEP added.

Recommendations

International practices and regulations vary widely, UNEP noted, with countries such as Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, and Cambodia having banned marine sand exports in the last two decades, while others lack any legislation or effective monitoring programs.

The UN agency’s 2022 Sand and Sustainability report also called for enhanced monitoring of sand extraction and use, and recommended ending sand extraction from beaches and active beach-nearshore sand systems for mining purposes.

It also calls for new international standards governing marine sand extraction.

Source link

Previous Post

‘Act together’ for clean air, Guterres urges

Next Post

UN welcomes G20 leaders’ declaration in New Delhi

Next Post
UN welcomes G20 leaders’ declaration in New Delhi

UN welcomes G20 leaders’ declaration in New Delhi

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECOMMENDED NEWS

CHAMP Initiative Advances Subnational Content in NDCs 3.0

6 days ago

Land Use Changed the Climate. Now Climate’s Changing the Land

21 hours ago

5 Ways COP30 Can Deliver on Countries’ Climate Plans

7 days ago

Climate Change Disproportionately Affects Informal Settlements

7 days ago

POPULAR NEWS

  • Nature Crime Threatens Our Planet. Here Are 5 Ways to Fight Back.

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • ‘Keep working with us to build a better world,’ Guterres says, as major UN civil society forum closes in Kenya

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Explainer: What’s COP28 and why is it important?

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Portland utility targets distributed energy, smart grid in net-zero plan

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • UN issues global alert over teacher shortage

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Ecobuild.club

ecobuild.club is an online news portal which aims to provide knowledge about Sustainability, Insulation, Energy Efficiency, Eco Build, Green Energy & Natural Global Resources.

Follow us on social media:

Recent News

  • Land Use Changed the Climate. Now Climate’s Changing the Land
  • Putting Nature on the Balance Sheet: How Natural Capital Accounting Works
  • Safeguarding clean water access as climate threats rise

Category

  • Eco Build
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Green Energy
  • Insulation
  • Natural Global Resources
  • Sustainability
  • Videos

Subscribe to get more!

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2018 EcoBuild.club - All about Eco Friendly Environment !

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Sustainability
  • Insulation
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Eco Build
  • Green Energy
  • Natural Global Resources
  • Videos

© 2018 EcoBuild.club - All about Eco Friendly Environment !