Oil pollution refers to the release of crude oil, oily waste or hydrocarbons into marine and coastal environments due to tanker spills, offshore drilling leaks, pipeline ruptures and port activities.
Impacts of Oil Pollution on the Marine Ecosystem
On Marine Life – Oil coats fish, seabirds, turtles and marine mammals, blocking respiration and movement.
Damage to Coastal Habitats – Hydrocarbons hinder photosynthesis, coral polyp function and seagrass growth – Coral bleaching and mortality.
Bioaccumulation – PAHs (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) accumulate in fish, disrupting reproduction.
Reduction in Primary Productivity – Oil blocks sunlight and inhibits phytoplankton growth, weakening food chains.
Disruption of Ecosystem Services – Eg- Mangroves absorb oil and suffer irreversible mortality.
Why Oil Pollution is Particularly Harmful for India
Extensive Coastline and High Biodiversity – India’s 7,500 km coastline hosts mangroves, coral reefs and estuaries that are highly sensitive to oil. Eg- Gulf of Mannar and Sundarbans.
Heavy Maritime Traffic – India’s 95% trade by volume and 70-74% trade by value passes through sea routes.
Around 170-180 million people live in coastal districts, and nearly 30% of the total population relies on coastal resources for livelihood – Fishery bans post-spills hurt incomes.
Vulnerability of Ecologically Fragile Zones to even minor spills. Eg- Lakshadweep corals, Chilika lagoon, estuarine wetlands
Capacity gaps in early detection, containment and coastal clean-up, especially for regional ports
Food Security Risks – Decline in marine fish impacts protein supply for coastal populations
Way Forward
Bioremediation – Eg- use of Bacteria like Oilzapper
Use of Sorbents to absorb or adsorb oil
Natural sorbents – Straw, Volcanic ash
Synthetic – Polyester-derived plastic shavings.
International cooperation under Marpol convention
India must adopt advanced monitoring, green shipping practices and ecosystem-based restoration to build resilient, spill-proof marine systems for the future.