Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Japan’s helping hand with seaweed

Date:

Share post:

Japan has stepped in to help the Caribbean deal with its Sargassum seaweed problem.

For many years, the encroaching seaweed has been washing ashore, often causing smelly build-up as well as adversely affecting local sea life. The phenomenon has been attributed to climate change.

Yesterday, Japan and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) signed a three-year, US$12.3 million Project For Strengthening Sargassum Management Capacities in the Caribbean, at UN House, Marine Gardens, Christ Church. It involves six countries – Barbados, St Kitts and Nevis, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, and St Lucia. Each will receive around US$2 million in equipment and expertise.

Ambassador of Japan to Barbados Teruhiko Shinada said the donation would include harvesters, beach rakes, boats, tractors, dump trucks, floating booms and barriers. As Japan is also an island, they understood the importance of marine preservation and coastal protection, he said. (CA)

Subscribe now to our eNATION edition for the full story.

For the latest stories and breaking news updates download the Nationnews apps for iOS and Android.

 

1 COMMENT

Comments are closed.

Related articles

Over 220 enter Party Monarch 2026 Competition

The National Cultural Foundation (NCF) announced that 92 performers have registered for the Power Soca competition, while 134...

Three Surinamese nationals charged in separate cocaine cases

Police have charged three Surinamese nationals in separate cocaine-related cases linked to May 23.  Police say 33-year-old Farino Revelino...

Jones opens up about struggles

Akela Jones, the much-loved track and field athlete, has delivered a raw and emotional account of the personal...

Caribbean in ‘debt-climate trap’

A leading regional economist, who once led the Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago, is warning that the...