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30 Jun 2009
The world’s seas are gradually filling with an increasing volume of waste, with plastic making up the single largest part of pollution in the marine environment, according to a new report authored
by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Washington-based
advocacy group The Ocean Conservancy, cited by Deutsche Presse-Agentur
(dpa).
Plastic most often found in the form of PET bottles and shopping bags
can be found floating in seas around the globe. It accounts for up to
80 percent of marine waste pollution in some waters, according to the
report which was published in Washington and Nairobi to mark World
Oceans Day on June 8.
Smoking also plays a major role in marine pollution. The report’s
researchers discovered that of the 103 million pieces of marine
pollution categorised in the study, 25 million were cigarette filters
or individual cigarettes.
“The oceans are our life support systems,” Ocean Conservancy President
Vikki Spruill said. “They supply much of the oxygen we breath, the food
we eat and regulate the climate we need to survive. But marine
pollution continues to pose a threat to our health.”
The report highlights the plight of sea turtles who often confuse
plastic bags with jellyfish, one of their main sources of food. Many
sea turtles die from consuming plastic bags.
A five-year study of Arctic Fulmar seabirds in the North Sea found 95 percent had pieces of plastic in their stomachs.
This plastic is then broken down into smaller parts before being passed
out into the environment and consumed by smaller organisms. In this way
plastic is reaching the lowest levels of the marine food chain.
“Marine waste pollution is symptomatic of a wider problem,” UNEP
executive director Achim Steiner said in a press release. “It
highlights our wasteful practices and bad management of natural
resources.”
Plastic bags, bottles and other forms of waste that are gathering in
our seas could be recycled or considerably reduced through proper waste
management. “Some forms of waste such as tin foil or disposable plastic
bags, which are choking our seas, should be banned or their manufacture
quickly stopped. There is no justification for their continued
production anywhere,” Steiner said. This first study of its kind looked
at marine waste found in 12 sea regions including the Mediterranean,
the Baltic and the Caribbean.
According to the report’s authors much of the waste found at sea is
caused by tourism. A good example of how tourism and clean oceans are
not mutually exclusive can be found in Mauritius and the Seychelles
which are not contributing to waste pollution in the Indian Ocean even
though they are very popular tourist destinations. According to earlier
findings by UNEP, 6.4 million tonnes of waste are disposed of at sea
every year. Every square kilometre of sea has an estimated 46,000
pieces of plastic floating in it.
Most of that waste is produced by international shipping. Instead of
paying to dispose of their waste in harbours, many captains decide to
have their ship’s garbage simply thrown overboard while at sea.
Shipping as a source of marine pollution is followed by domestic and
industrial waste that is washed into the oceans down rivers and then
spread around the globe by currents and the wind.
Source: Neurope