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Report
Better maps could protect India's coastline and communities
DW (English)
Follow
7/7/2025
Coastal habitats, such as mangroves, are at risk from tourism and development. By improving maps, researchers, fishers and conservationists aim to protect them.
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00:00
We are in the Coromandel Coast, in South Eastern India, with its long, sweeping beaches and rich cultural heritage.
00:07
The region around the cities of Puducherry and Karaikal is popular with visitors and many people here earn their living from tourism.
00:19
But not everyone is happy. Local residents like Ekarnan, for example. He has fished here in Puducherry for many years.
00:27
We used to get the boats up by 4 a.m. and by 9 a.m. we used to have close to 1,500 rupees worth of fish.
00:41
That's the equivalent of 15 euros. These days he spends much longer out on the water, for less return.
00:48
His catch and his earnings have almost halved in recent years.
00:52
Everything started with 2004 tsunami, which hit the coast of the state of Tamil Nadu hard.
00:58
Many fishing communities were destroyed.
01:03
The local government then had mangrove forests planted.
01:06
These forests provide coastal protection and a new habitat for many animals.
01:11
But word about these long, green swathes of coastline spread.
01:17
The area attracts visitors from across India.
01:20
It is the local fishing communities, who have lived here for centuries, who are losing out.
01:28
For example, here at Pondi Marina Beach.
01:31
Ten years ago, it looked completely different.
01:34
They used to cast nets from the beach to catch fish during a particular season.
01:41
On the other hand, there were places where turtles lay eggs.
01:45
Now both things are not possible here.
01:47
It is now a place that promotes tourism.
01:51
So what is happening here is that this beach is becoming a place that only a particular set of people can use.
01:57
One of the reasons for this exclusion was that the land use of these fishing communities was not recorded in the coastal zone management plans.
02:08
Nor were the ecologically sensitive areas mapped properly.
02:13
Prabhakar Jai Prakash and a few others are working together with the local fishers to change that.
02:19
They are carefully mapping the coastal strip section by section.
02:23
Prabhakar is part of CPRM, the Coastal People's Right to Life Movement.
02:28
If these places aren't included in the government's plans, they won't be protected.
02:33
That's the reality.
02:35
The knowledge of the fisher women is invaluable, as is their mapping work.
02:40
The women who have joined together to form Karaikal Fisher Women's Federation are acquainted with every single tree or bush in the area.
02:53
Often, the women go out to measure, record and chart together.
02:58
For instance, in Akampet in the Karaikal district, there is a huge sand dune.
03:08
When the tsunami hit, the water only flowed into the flat areas and people behind the sand dune were protected.
03:15
Even today, 20 years after the tsunami, we can only drink the water from the tap near the sand dune.
03:20
Dunes are vital for survival in this region. The porous sand stores rainwater, keeping it away from the tainted, salty groundwater.
03:31
Yet, almost 140 hectares of dunes in the region are not found on plants.
03:38
As dunes are an important source of drinking water, all local communities are interested in preserving them.
03:43
About eight hectares of mudflats are also missing from all official plants.
03:50
What looks like a mere damp swamp is actually a mudflat.
03:54
Some people could think, this looks so greasy, how useful can it be?
04:00
But this is the basis of the coastal food system.
04:04
It provides food for several bird species and other life forms.
04:09
It is also an amazing nesting ground for crabs, prawns and fish.
04:15
Mangrove forests protect the nearby coastline from erosion.
04:19
They are also highly effective carbon sinks, storing more greenhouse gases than other types of trees.
04:26
Mangrove plantations serve as a buffer zone in the centre.
04:32
On the eastern side, they harbour a variety of fish, crabs and shrimps and provide a nesting place for fish,
04:41
which ensures the livelihood of fishermen.
04:50
On the western side, they also prevent salt water from entering the farmland,
04:55
which benefits farmers.
04:58
In August 2024, this team, through official representative, petitioned the local government and filed a case with the National Green Tribunal.
05:11
They hope that the coastal zone plans will soon be revised to include their data and that of the fishing communities.
05:18
The process could take up to two years.
05:20
It is the only way to preserve the coastal ecology these communities depend on.
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