The National Oil Spill Disaster Contingency Plan, commonly called NOS-DCP, is India’s national framework for preparedness and response to oil spills in the maritime zone.
It lays down the roles of different agencies, reporting procedures, response mechanism, command structure, clean-up methods and coordination system during oil spill incidents.
In simple terms, NOS-DCP tells agencies what to do, who will lead, how response will be coordinated, and how damage from marine oil pollution will be reduced.
The Indian Coast Guard prepared the NOS-DCP after it was given responsibility for marine environment protection in India’s maritime zones on 7 March 1986. The plan was approved by the Committee of Secretaries in 1993.
Lead Agency
The Indian Coast Guard is the central coordinating authority for combating oil spills in Indian waters.
Its responsibilities include:
• Implementing the national contingency plan for oil spill disaster
• Surveillance of maritime zones against oil spills
• Combating oil spills in maritime zones
• Coordinating with ports, oil-handling agencies, coastal states and central ministries
• Maintaining national-level pollution response preparedness
The Coast Guard handles oil spill response in maritime zones except within the jurisdiction of ports and oil installations. Ports are responsible within port limits, while oil-handling agencies are responsible around their own installations.
Tiered Response System
NOS-DCP follows a tiered response mechanism. This helps decide the level of response based on the size and seriousness of the spill.
Tier 1 refers to small, local spills that can be handled by the port, ship, oil terminal or local operator.
Tier 2 refers to medium-level spills that require regional support, additional equipment and coordination among multiple agencies.
Tier 3 refers to major spills that may require national-level mobilisation and possibly international assistance.
This system is important because every oil spill does not need the same level of response. A minor spill inside a port and a major vessel accident near the coast require very different levels of preparedness.
Main Components
NOS-DCP guidelines generally cover the full response chain from reporting to recovery.
The major components include:
• Reporting and alert procedures
• Incident assessment
• Command and control structure
• Role of central and state agencies
• Role of ports and oil-handling agencies
• Deployment of equipment and trained manpower
• Spill containment and clean-up methods
• Shoreline protection
• Waste collection and disposal
• Record keeping and claims documentation
• Training and joint exercises
• Updating of regional and local contingency plans
The plan is also periodically reviewed and updated. The Indian Coast Guard issued NOSDCP Circular 01-2025 as an amendment to the NOS-DCP 2015 edition, showing that the plan is updated through circulars and periodic review.
Kerala Context
In Kerala’s case, NOS-DCP becomes relevant because the state is preparing its own shoreline-focused oil spill response system after the MSC Elsa 3 incident off the Kerala coast.
The national framework gives the Indian Coast Guard the offshore coordination role, but Kerala still needs a strong state-level mechanism for:
• Shoreline clean-up
• District-level response
• Warning coastal communities
• Handling contaminated debris
• Coordinating with fishermen
• Monitoring beaches and backwaters
• Safe disposal of oily waste
• Damage assessment and compensation
This is where the role of KSPCB, KSDMA, coastal district administrations, ports, fisheries department and local bodies becomes important. Kerala’s Oil Spill Contingency Plan should work within the national NOS-DCP framework but adapt it to Kerala’s coastline, fishing economy and fragile coastal ecosystems.
Importance
NOS-DCP is important because oil spills can quickly become ecological and livelihood disasters.
A major spill can affect:
• Marine biodiversity
• Fisheries
• Beaches
• Tourism
• Mangroves and wetlands
• Coastal settlements
• Ports and shipping
• Public health
India has four Coast Guard Pollution Response Centres at Mumbai, Chennai, Port Blair and Vadinar, created to strengthen national oil spill response capacity.
For Kerala, this is particularly important because its coastline is densely populated, fishing-dependent and exposed to busy shipping routes.
Challenges
The main challenge is coordination. Oil spill response involves the Coast Guard, ports, pollution control boards, disaster management authorities, fisheries department, shipping companies, customs, local bodies and coastal communities.
Other challenges include:
• Fast spread of oil slicks due to currents and wind
• Rough monsoon sea conditions
• Hazardous cargo along with fuel spill
• Limited local equipment for shoreline clean-up
• Disposal of oily and hazardous waste
• Compensation for fishermen and affected communities
• Long-term ecological monitoring
The MSC Elsa 3 incident showed that Kerala’s preparedness cannot depend only on emergency reaction. A pre-approved, rehearsed and district-level shoreline response plan is necessary.
Conclusion
NOS-DCP is India’s national framework for oil spill preparedness and response, led by the Indian Coast Guard. For Kerala, its importance lies in building a state-level shoreline clean-up and coordination plan that fits within the national framework but responds to Kerala’s specific coastal, ecological and livelihood risks.


