The Indian Ocean as Cradle of a New Blue Economy

Context:

  • India is increasingly advocating a sustainable, inclusive, and resilient Blue Economy framework for the Indian Ocean Region (IOR).
  • Editorial highlights India’s potential leadership role in transforming the Indian Ocean into a global laboratory for ocean sustainability, aligned with climate goals and cooperative security.
  • Recent global platforms such as the Blue Economy and Finance Forum (BEFF), Monaco (June 2025) and COP30, Belém have reinforced financial and institutional momentum for ocean governance.

Key Highlights:

Global Initiatives and Financial Commitments

  • BEFF, Monaco (2025):
    • Highlighted a €25 billion pipeline of existing ocean investments.
    • Announced €8.7 billion in new commitments for sustainable ocean projects.
  • One Ocean Partnership (launched at COP30, Belém):
    • Commitment to mobilize $20 billion by 2030 for global ocean action.

India’s Strategic Vision

  • SAGAR Doctrine (Security and Growth for All in the Region):
    • Anchors India’s vision of the Indian Ocean as a zone of peace, stability, and shared prosperity.
  • Emphasis on cooperative, consultative, and outcome-oriented engagement with IOR littoral states.

Priority Areas for a Sustainable Blue Economy

  • Ecosystem restoration and biodiversity protection, especially coral reefs.
  • Sustainable fisheries management to counter Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing.
  • Promotion of green shipping, offshore renewable energy, sustainable aquaculture, and marine biotechnology as climate-compatible growth pathways.

Institutional and Financial Innovations

  • Proposal for an Indian Ocean Blue Fund, seeded by India, to channel global finance into regional sustainability priorities.
  • Establishment of a Regional Resilience and Ocean Innovation Hub to:
    • Strengthen ocean observation networks.
    • Improve early warning systems for climate and disaster risks.

Legal and Normative Leadership

  • India’s readiness to ratify the BBNJ Agreement (Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction) provides an opportunity to pioneer globally relevant ocean governance solutions.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Issue: Unsustainable exploitation of ocean resources in the Indian Ocean.
  • Causes: Climate change, overfishing, weak governance, IUU fishing, coral degradation.
  • Government Initiatives:
    • SAGAR doctrine, Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative (IPOI), support for UNCLOS.
  • Benefits:
    • Economic growth, food security, climate resilience, regional stability.
  • Challenges:
    • Financing gaps, geopolitical competition, weak regional coordination.
  • Impact:
    • Positions India as a norm-setter in ocean sustainability and maritime governance.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Key Concepts:
    • Blue Economy: Sustainable use of ocean resources for growth while preserving marine ecosystems.
    • UNCLOS: Legal framework governing maritime zones and activities.
    • BBNJ Agreement: Conservation and sustainable use of marine biodiversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction.
  • Strategic Significance:
    • Indian Ocean as a hub for global trade, energy flows, and climate regulation.
  • Way Forward:
    • Lead regional coalitions for ocean sustainability.
    • Mobilize blended finance through an Indian Ocean Blue Fund.
    • Integrate security with sustainability to address ecological and non-traditional threats.
    • Enhance capacity-building and technology transfer among IOR states.

UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):

  • GS 2: International Relations, Global Governance, Regional Cooperation
  • GS 3: Environment & Ecology, Blue Economy, Sustainable Development

 

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