Updated On: 16 September, 2022 06:06 AM IST | Mumbai | Dipti Singh
NGO’s study shows massive coastal inundation, shoreline erosion over three decades; says climate change, sand mining to blame

The Devghar shoreline
Nearly 55 hectares of coastal ecosystems—an area equivalent to 10 Wankhede stadiums—near Devghar in Raigad district has submerged over the past three decades, shows a study. Pune-based Srushti Conservation Foundation (SCF), a non-profit organisation, conducted the study close to the mouth of Bankot Creek, which has a 1.5-km-long beach, using satellite images. Information from the locals about erosion prompted the study.
Preliminary statistics show there was a total loss of around 55 hectares of coastal habitats between 1990 and 2022, including mangroves, creeklets, mudflats and sandy coastlines, and erosion of over 300 metres of shoreline. “It clearly indicates a worrying sign of coastal inundation and extreme shoreline erosion, which has prompted concerns about the effects of climate change,” the researchers said.