NEPA responds to seaweed build-up
THE National Environmental and Planning Agency (NEPA) will be using a multi-agency approach to reduce the accumulation of sargassum (seaweed) along Jamaica’s coastline.
NEPA’s director for environmental management and conservation, Anthony McKenzie, said that several agencies, central to the undertaking, have been identified.
They include: the National Solid Waste Management Authority Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management and selected parish councils.
These entities, he said, will assist NEPA to clean up beaches adversely affected by the seaweed.
McKenzie explained that consequent on the recent
build-up of sargassum along Jamaica’s shoreline within recent years, particularly in 2015, and the potential negative impact it poses, NEPA has developed a three-tiered clean-up response strategy, to deal with it.
The director explained that the first tier would see beach property owners/operators undertaking routine daily clean-ups by raking and burying the seaweed, if the build-up is below three feet or one metre.
The second tier would entail the parish councils and other local authorities removing the seaweed, if residents are unable to do so.