In a World Ocean Day interview
on Green Talk with Anil Pratap Singh on Munsif TV, Jagannathan
highlighted green fuels, ports, ship recycling, finance, technology, seafarer
training and waste control as the core of India’s maritime policy. He noted
that shipping contributes 2% to 3% of global carbon emissions and argued that
shifting to sustainable shipping is an investment in India’s trade future.
The Directorate General of
Shipping (under the Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways) is implementing
a National Maritime Decarbonization Policy Framework built around:
Green shipping and ports; Green ship recycling; Green finance and technology
;Human capital and just transition and waste management
The
plan includes energy-efficiency upgrades for existing vessels, transitioning
from internal combustion engines to net-zero fuels such as green
ammonia, green hydrogen and green methanol, and implementing the Harit
Sagar port guidelines. Key
pillars include: Ship recycling: India will align with the Hong
Kong Convention framework; Finance & technology: Capital
support for green initiatives plus digital tools like the maritime single
window and Human capital: Raise India’s share of global seafarers
from 16.5% to over 20%, with the long-term goal of one in four global seafarers
being Indian. Jagannathan linked this roadmap to the Viksit Bharat 2047 agenda.
The blue economy contributes roughly 4% of India’s GDP and is vital to
achieving the target 7% to 7.5% compound annual growth rate. He highlighted
India’s 11,000-km coastline and growth areas beyond mercantile trade: cruise
tourism, coastal shipping, marine biotechnology, aquaculture and deep-ocean
mineral exploitation. The
legislative programme comprises revisions to: Merchant Shipping Act –
streamlines vessel registration, ownership and wreck removal; Coastal
Shipping Act 2025 – focuses on domestic coastal trade, cabotage and
feeder services linked to deep-water ports including Vizhinjam, Galathea and
proposed Vadhavan port and Indian Ports Act 2025 – shifts policy
toward a landlord model and wider public-private partnerships Jagannathan
also connected ocean protection to inland river systems, citing microplastics,
raw sewage and untreated industrial effluents entering rivers such as the Ganga
before reaching the sea. He reaffirmed India’s commitment to SDG 13 and
SDG 14 and called for transparent, consensus-based global maritime funds
that protect developing nations and human capital.