The New Indian
Express of 4.06.2005.
We reproduce it here because it shows in past decade we
continue to focus on Green Issues.
ACCOSTING THE SEA COAST
n.nandhivarman
Nowadays seas
frighten the fisher folk. For centuries fisher folk had established
unassailable bond of love with seas, but in post tsunami phase every change in
the sea causes nightmare. The sea recedes and people become panicky. Waves
enter villages lashing out the beaches. People run hither thither for safety.
Kanyakumari to Cuddalore almost for a week people of the coast spent sleepless
nights and anxious days. This scenario had wakened up the social thinkers and
scientists to look for solutions to coastal erosion. Changes due to continental
drift are inevitable. Here too if we look at the projections made by
scientists, the future world map of 100 million years and 250 million years
show changes in India’s position but India always remain attached to the Asian
continent. This should be viewed with consolation, because in past India was an island nation separated from Asia .
“Our planet is a tri-axial ellipsoid, moving
around the Sun in an elliptical orbit at 30 kilometers per second and rotating
around its axis at 1,666 kilometers per hour which is faster than speed of
sound. Such high speed rotation has resulted in polar areas being compressed
towards the center and equatorial areas being bulged out” says Professor Vishal
Sharma. Apart from these changes the coast of Tamil Nadu
had undergone variations in the past but the present causes more concern. As
per a study by the School of Earth Sciences of Bharathidasan University “Before
1.5 million years ago Sea extended up to Madurai .
Around 90,000 years before Chennai, Pondicherry
and Vedranyam were encircled by seas. Since sea level subsided 65,000 years ago
India and Ceylon got
connected. When sea level rose by 27,000 years ago both parted and when it fell
by 17,000 years before joined again to part again". And amidst panic
reaction to such studies, if we look at the map of coastal changes in Tamil Nadu,
one could know that the coast instead of moving inwards had extended seawards.
This is enough to give us fresh hope for survival braving the fury of Nature.
VARYING TAMIL NADU
COAST
The sea erosion
of coast is not an India
specific problem. "More than 80 percent of the world shorelines are
eroding at the rates varying from centimeters to meters per year." says
Orrin.H.Pelkey, Professor of Geology and Director of the Program for the study
of Developed Shorelines in the Duke University, North Carolina, USA. He had
authored two books and one of its titles has a message to all of us. “Living by
the Rules of the Sea" is his book and it is high time we learn to live by
the rules of the seas.
A walk in the
beach and breathing its salubrious breeze is world wide habit. But how many of
those who visit beaches is aware on how beaches are formed? People are worried
about erosion. But it is a fact that without erosion beaches could not be
formed. "Without the process of erosion, we would not have beaches, dumes,
barrier beaches and the highly productive bays and estuaries that owe their
existence to the presence of barrier beaches" opines Jim O'Connell, the
Coastal Processes Specialist of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Well
erosion might have helped beach formation, but it is sending alarm bells from
Kanyakumari to Chennai and beyond. Let us look for some scholarly opinion in
this regard. After a close study at the Pitchavaram forests near Chidambaram,
M.S.Swaminathan Research Foundation reveals that "in between 1930 and
1970, the seashore had eroded by 550 meters. Between 1970 and 1992 the rate of
erosion was about 12 meters." The writing on the wall is clear. In past
Sirkazhi was a coastal town, which now is interior by kms. The Harbour of Choza Empire , Poompuhar is now beneath
the seas. At present warning from Pitchavaram must awaken us.
Apart from
facing Nature's onslaughts with preventive measures, human errors too needs to
be corrected. Sand is the food for beaches, and it is needless to say that our
rivers are not supplying that food to the beaches. Human exploitation and
drying of rivers depletes sand supply to beaches. Interlinking of rivers as
often advised by our President A.P.J.Abdul Kalama will not only solve water
crisis but will save dying beaches.
Sea level rise
is primarily due to the thermal expansion of the sea water and melting of the
glaciers and ice caps. Artic Climate Impact assessment by 250 scientists says
that “global warming is heating the Artic almost twice as fast as rest of the
planet” United Nations sponsored Inter Governmental panel on climate change
will be bringing out its fourth assessment by 2007. Changing Winds and currents
in the Indian Ocean in 1990’s contributed to
the global warming says a NASA study in the Geophysical Research Letters. The
recent lashing of waves of Tamil Nadu coast was triggered by a storm near Australia ,
scientists say.
The National
Hurricane Center of USA reports that “hurricanes release heat energy at the
rate of 50 trillion to 200 trillion watts. This is equivalent to 10 mega ton
nuclear bomb exploding about every 20 minutes.” But we in India are in
one way lucky. Our coast will not be hit by hurricanes. Our cyclones are less
intense. Storms that hit continental America
have almost the full width of Atlantic Ocean to gain strength, since our
cyclones emanate from Bay of Bengal there is
neither room nor time for them to grow, and this natural phenomenon helps us in
one way.
Global warming also causes rise in sea level
inundating coastal areas. We must know that most of the ice sheet rests on land
that's below sea level. At a point called the "grounding line" it
starts floating, thus displacing its own weight in water. And as it turns out,
the line may not move much because the flow of the ice streams seems to be
restrained by friction against rocks at the bottom and sides rather than the
ice shelf. So if the ice shelf melts, the flow of the streams should not change
appreciably. And since the volume added to the ocean depends on how much ice
moves from land to water -- as determined by the grounding line -- the upshot
seems to be relative stability. "The ice streams do not appear to be
susceptible to the kind of unstable retreat once envisaged," says Bentley.
"Their flow is largely insensitive to the presence of the ice shelf so the
grounding line would remain the same."
Instead of possibly collapsing in 100 years, as was considered possible
10 years ago, Bentley says the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is more likely to
collapse -- if at all -- in perhaps 5,000 years at the soonest. By this
scientific prediction it becomes evident that sea level rise by global warming
too will not cause more harm in near future, if we are well prepared for it
with preventive measures. If governments have plans for beach nourishment with
vegetation, which is the cheapest preventive measure, it will go a long way in
arresting coastal erosion. Our survival instincts will save us in planet Earth,
but let us strive to survive with forethought.
Courtesy: The
New Indian Express-week end 4.06.2005
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