Mexico Installs Anti-Sargassum Barriers Along Popular Coastline

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Sargassum collecting on the beaches of the Mexican Caribbean.

Mexico’s Naval Secretary announced the country successfully installed over 9,000 meters of anti-sargassum barriers along the coast of Quintana Roo.

According to Riviera Maya News, Mexican Secretary of the Navy Jose Rafael Ojeda Duran announced the progress during a presentation of the country’s 2023 Sargassum Operation plan.

In total, the Navy has installed 9,050 meters (around 29,691 feet) of anti-sargassum barriers, including 1,850 meters in Othon P. Blanco (Chetumal and Mahahual), 2,400 meters in Puerto Morelos, 2,500 meters in Solidaridad (Playa del Carmen and Puerto Aventuras) and 2,300 in Tulum.

Ojeda Duran also revealed the Navy employs 328 people and 16 small boats dedicated to removing the stinky seaweed along the Quintana Roo coast. Another 11 sargasso vessels are serving in the region to assist with at-sea collection.

The Mexican Navy revealed its sargassum vessels would be spread out through the region, with two stationed in Cancun, two in Puerto Morelos, two in Solidaridad, three in Othon P. Blanco, one for Isla Mujeres and one in Tulum.

In March, Florida Atlantic University researcher Dr. Brian Lapointe said an enormous algae mass has formed for the 2023 season, spanning across 5,000 miles. Lapointe explained that this year’s sargassum bloom began developing early and doubled in size between December and January.

The floating expanse, “was larger in January than it has ever been since this new region of sargassum growth began in 2011,” Lapointe said. “This is an entirely new oceanographic phenomenon that is creating such a problem-really a catastrophic problem-for tourism in the Caribbean region, where it piles up on beaches up to 5 or 6 feet deep.”

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