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    Race Against Heat: Maldives Urged to Pause Dredging as Coral Bleaching Threat Returns

    Civil societyRace Against Heat: Maldives Urged to Pause Dredging as...
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    Race Against Heat: Maldives Urged to Pause Dredging as Coral Bleaching Threat Returns

    As sea temperatures climb and the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration issues a bleaching watch, a Maldivian NGO warns that unchecked coastal development could push the nation’s iconic reefs past recovery.

    Maldives Resilient Reefs (MRR), a local non-governmental organisation dedicated to protecting the archipelago’s coral ecosystems, has issued an urgent appeal to the Maldives government. As of 11 April 2026, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Coral Reef Watch has placed the Maldives under a Coral Bleaching Alert Level: Watch. While immediate risk remains low, forecasts predict a sharp escalation within one to 12 weeks, potentially reaching Alert Level 1, when significant bleaching becomes likely.

    MRR is calling for an immediate temporary halt to all dredging and land-reclamation projects until reef conditions normalise, followed by a two-week buffer period – or four weeks if stress is detected. The group has also urged tourism operators to suspend sand pumping and beach replenishment, insisted on full treatment of sewage before ocean discharge, and asked the public to avoid anchoring damage or unnecessary physical contact with reefs while reporting any signs of bleaching to the Marine Research Institute.

    Understanding the Science – and the Stakes

    Coral bleaching occurs when prolonged elevated sea-surface temperatures force corals to expel the symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae) that provide up to 90 per cent of their energy and give them colour. The corals turn ghostly white and, if stress persists, starve and die. In the Maldives, a nation whose 1,200 islands sit atop one of the world’s largest atoll systems, healthy reefs are not merely scenic backdrops; they are the foundation of tourism, coastal protection, fisheries and biodiversity.

    The current watch comes barely two years after the fourth global mass bleaching event of 2023–2024, which delivered record heat stress to Maldivian waters. Sea-surface temperatures peaked at 31.5 °C, with degree-heating weeks exceeding the mortality threshold for many species. In central atolls, live hard-coral cover plunged more than 40 per cent on average; one lagoon reef in Ari Atoll lost 57 per cent, with branching and tabular Acropora species hit hardest. Southern atolls such as Huvadhoo showed greater resilience, with some sites actually gaining 12–23 per cent coral cover, dominated by hardy Acropora and Pocillopora. Yet scientists warn that repeated events are eroding the system’s overall recovery capacity.

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    Echoes of Devastating Past Events

    The Maldives has endured three previous mass-bleaching crises in living memory: 1998, 2016 and 2023. The 1998 El Niño event was catastrophic, slashing shallow-water coral cover from around 40 per cent to less than 2 per cent in places; full recovery took nearly a decade. The 2016 event again wiped out roughly 70 per cent of corals in some areas, particularly fast-growing branching species. Even after partial rebound, many reefs shifted toward more heat-tolerant but slower-growing massive corals such as Porites and Pavona.

    Recovery has never been uniform. Oceanic reefs and uninhabited islands with lower human pressure have shown faster rebound, while reefs near resorts and inhabited islands – subject to dredging, nutrient runoff and physical damage – have lagged. The 2024 event confirmed this pattern: central atolls suffered far more than southern ones, underscoring how local stressors amplify global warming.

    Local Actions Can Buy Time

    MRR’s call is grounded in evidence that additional local pressures can tip already-stressed corals into mortality. Dredging and reclamation stir up sediment, increasing turbidity and smothering polyps. Untreated sewage adds nutrients that fuel algal overgrowth, further weakening reefs. Sand pumping for beach nourishment does the same. By pausing these activities during the critical heat window, the government can reduce cumulative stress and give corals a fighting chance.

    Tourism, which contributes nearly 30 per cent of GDP and depends almost entirely on healthy reefs for diver and snorkeller appeal, stands to lose the most if reefs degrade further. Yet the same industry can become part of the solution by voluntarily halting beach works and supporting monitoring. Public participation – reporting bleached colonies and practising reef-friendly behaviour – adds another layer of protection.

    A Narrow Window for Resilience

    The Maldives is on the front line of the global climate crisis. With 80 per cent of its land less than one metre above sea level, the country already faces existential threats from rising seas and coastal erosion. Coral reefs act as natural breakwaters; their loss would accelerate island instability and undermine the very tourism economy that funds adaptation.

    MRR’s appeal arrives at a pivotal moment. While the 2024 bleaching left scars, pockets of resilience prove that Maldivian reefs are not doomed – provided they are given breathing space between heatwaves. Halting non-essential coastal works now is a low-cost, high-impact measure that buys time until global emissions are curbed, MRR argues.

    For an archipelago whose identity, economy and survival are woven into its coral gardens, the choice is stark: act swiftly today, or watch the colour – and the life – drain from the reefs that define the Maldives.

    Image: The University of Queensland via Google Images

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