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The Hindu
The Hindu
National
The Hindu Bureau

First phase of offshore geotube breakwater project a success: Minister

Fisheries Minister Saji Cherian has said that the offshore geotube breakwater project being implemented at Poonthura in the capital had been found to be successful in the first phase.

Addressing the media after a review meeting of the project on Wednesday, the Minister said the remaining work is expected to be completed before the monsoon season. More dredgers and barges were being pressed into service for its timely completion.

“Of the 750-metre long offshore geotube installation planned to protect the shoreline as part of a pilot project, 200 metres have already been completed. The contractors will be asked to complete the remaining 500 metres this season,” he said.

“After the installation of the geotube at Poonthura, the stretch up to Shanghumughom will be implemented without delay. The first phase in Poonthura is successful. If the pilot project is successful, the government will consider extending it along the state’s entire coastline.”

Poonthura was experiencing the worst coastal erosion, which the conventional seawall failed to resist. Also, the government had to spend a good amount of money every year for its reconstruction.

To address the phenomenon, the National Institute of Ocean Technology (NIOT) implemented a method of preventing the loss of land by installing geotubes offshore in Chennai as a pilot project. A team of officials from Kerala led by the minister visited Chennai and explored the possibility of implementing it in Kerala.

Based on the NIOT study, the Kerala Infrastructure Investment Fund Board (KIIFB) released ₹20.73 crore to implement a one km-long pilot project from Poonthura to Shankhumukham, which is most prone to sea erosion.

Under the method, giant sand-filled geotubes of 12 to 15-metre diameter weighing 250 tonnes are installed up to eight metres deep. A 100-metre stretch was completed in April 2022 using massive dredgers and barges and trained deep-sea divers.

Recent deep-sea research found the formation of an increasing amount of permanent land here and the spawning of various species of fish around the Geotube while preventing the landward retreat of the shoreline. In the remaining part, the installation of the geotube resumed in January 2024, and work on another stretch of 100 metres is now underway.

Studies conducted by research institutes like NIOT and the National Centre for Coastal Research (NCCR) have found the onshore breakwater construction at Poonthura using geotubes to be effective, least expensive and environment-friendly.

Antony Raju, MLA, who was present at the meeting said the geotube costs only one-tenth the cost of laying rock seawalls. He said it was an eco-friendly and safe option to check erosion.

The Kerala State Coastal Area Development Corporation (KSCADC) is implementing the Geotube Offshore Breakwater Coastal Protection Project in Thiruvananthapuram.

P.I. Sheik Pareeth, managing director, KSCADC, M.V. Ramanamurthy, Director, Deep Ocean Mission, Ministry of Earth Sciences and Dr. Vijaya Ravichandran, scientist, National Institute of Ocean Technology were among those who attended the meeting.

Strategically placed offshore, the custom-made geotube acts as a barrier, diminishing the strength of oncoming sea waves. It results in a gentler wave action, depositing sand particles onto the shore, creating a stable and usable beach.

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