City
Epaper

Call for national standards to strengthen India's marine and coastal governance

By IANS | Updated: October 7, 2025 19:15 IST

Kochi, Oct 7 Marine scientists and policy experts have called for the establishment of Indian standards for marine ...

Open in App

Kochi, Oct 7 Marine scientists and policy experts have called for the establishment of Indian standards for marine and coastal management to safeguard ocean ecosystems and ensure sustainable fisheries.

They emphasised the need for a national framework that addresses key areas such as fisheries stock assessment, coastal resource mapping, and climate adaptation.

The recommendations came at a workshop on Marine Biodiversity Conservation and Standardisation, jointly organised by the ICAR–Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute (CMFRI) and the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) on Tuesday.

Indian Standards are gazetted documents that define minimum requirements for uniform and scientifically validated practices. Applied to the marine sector, they would enable India to adopt globally comparable methods for monitoring, conserving, and managing ocean resources, thereby improving policy credibility and data reliability.

"Marine biodiversity underpins ecosystem stability, fisheries productivity, and climate resilience. The lack of uniform protocols has resulted in fragmented data and weak enforcement," CMFRI Director Dr Grinson George said, while inaugurating the event.

Dr George said that the CMFRI would spearhead the formulation of scientific methodologies to be codified as Indian Standards, in collaboration with the BIS and other agencies.

The institute will also assist in developing training modules, certification programmes, and open-access repositories to promote adoption among scientists, policymakers, and coastal managers.

Experts observed that nationally recognised standards aligned with global frameworks such as the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) would strengthen both marine conservation and India’s trade competitiveness in seafood exports.

BIS Environment and Ecology Department head Virendra Singh said the bureau is committed to developing environmental standards to improve marine sustainability and fisheries governance.

The workshop also proposed the creation of an Indian Marine Sustainability Certification System under the BIS, designed as a cost-effective, inclusive, and context-specific alternative to foreign sustainability certifications.

Participants included scientists from the CMFRI, the IFGTB, the Zoological Survey of India, and the BIS.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalG20 Johannesburg Summit: PM Modi pitches global cooperation, disaster resilience and clean energy at Session 2

NationalTrinamool accuses Election Commission of bias, alleges BLOs being overworked during SIR exercise

NationalG20 Johannesburg Summit: PM Modi pitches global cooperation, disaster resilience and clean energy at Session 2

InternationalPM Modi, South Korean President hold talks on deepening economic ties

Other SportsFIDE World Cup 2025: Both semifinals head to tiebreak after another day of draws

National Realted Stories

NationalShocking urination assault on ‘differently-abled’ man sparks outrage in MP

National'One group in Cong working to retain Siddaramaiah as CM & another to unseat him': BJP on power tussle in Karnataka

NationalManipur International Polo tournament kicks off in Imphal

NationalAAP to oppose proposed Constitution amendment Bill

NationalAfter Bihar poll debacle, Prashant Kishor's Jan Suraaj dissolves all organisational units