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UNGA adopts SL-sponsored resolution to declare ‘World Seagrass Day’

26 May 2022

The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) has adopted the Sri Lanka-sponsored Resolution A/76/L.56, declaring 1 March as “World Seagrass Day”.  The resolution was adopted on 23 May 2022 by consensus, and co-sponsored by 24 countries. Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka to the UN Ambassador Mohan Pieris introduced the resolution under Agenda Item 15: Integrated and co-ordinated implementation of and follow-up to the outcomes of the major UN conferences and summits in the economic, social, and related fields. In his introduction, Ambassador Pieris highlighted Sri Lanka’s interest as a littoral state in bringing attention and awareness on a small but significant aspect of universal importance in combatting climate change.  He highlighted the importance of seagrass as a carbon sink, in protection against coastal erosion, in stabilising the sea bottom, increasing the resilience of the most vulnerable ecosystems, and increasing food stability for a number of marine creatures, and the pivotal role it plays in curtailing the effects of climate change. The World Seagrass Association closely supported the Government of Sri Lanka in this endeavor. Seagrasses are one of the most valuable marine ecosystems on earth covering around 300,000 square kilometers in 159 countries and six continents. They provide a range of critical environmental, economic, and social benefits. The most significant benefit is the enormous carbon sequestration potential of seagrass, storing up to 18% of the world’s oceanic carbon, which is greater than that of rainforests which makes protection and restoration of seagrass a vital tool in efforts to adapt and mitigate the adverse effects of climate change.  The vital functions of seagrasses also include its role in stabilising the sea bottom and providing ecosystem support via food and shelter for a number of marine creatures, including commercial and recreational fish species, as well as endangered and charismatic species such as turtles, dugongs and manatees. However, seagrass ecosystems are being destroyed as a result of human activity. The United Nations Environmental Programme Publication “Out of the Blue: the value of seagrasses to the environment and to people” states that “7% of seagrass marine habitat is being lost worldwide per year, which is equivalent to a football field of seagrass lost every 30 minutes”. The initiative was a collective effort of studying seagrass ecosystems and examining restoration and conservation through nature-based solutions by a non-governmental organisations (NGO) and academics, paving the way to highlight the importance of scientific-evidence based approaches at the policy level. The Biodiversity Secretariat of the Ministry of Environment, Department of Aquaculture and Fisheries at the Wayamba University, and the Blue Resource Trust worked together with the Ocean Affairs, Environment, and Climate Change Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and contributed to the process and co-ordinated with the Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka to the UN in New York in this regard.  


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