That's according to scientists who released research on Thursday
estimating that a staggering 8 million metric tones of plastic
pollution enter the oceans each year from the world's 192 coastal
countries based on 2010 data.
Based on rising waste levels, they estimated that more than 9
million tons would end up in the oceans in 2015.
Experts have sounded the alarm in recent years over how plastic
pollution is killing huge numbers of seabirds, marine mammals, sea
turtles and other creatures while sullying ocean ecosystems.
China was responsible for the most ocean plastic pollution per year
with an estimated 2.4 million tons, about 30 percent of the global
total, followed by Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam, Sri Lanka,
Thailand, Egypt, Malaysia, Nigeria and Bangladesh.
The United States was the only rich industrialized nation in the top
20, and it ranked No. 20. Coastal EU nations combined would rank
18th.
The trash encompasses just about anything imaginable made of plastic
including shopping bags, bottles, toys, food wrappers, fishing gear,
cigarette filters, sunglasses, buckets and toilet seats.
"In short, you name it and it is probably somewhere in the marine
environment," said Kara Lavender Law, a research professor of
oceanography with the Massachusetts-based Sea Education Association.
The estimates were based on information including World Bank data
for trash generated per person in all nations with a coastline,
coastal population density, the amount of plastic waste countries
produce and the quality of their waste-management practices.
[to top of second column] |
"I think this is a wake-up call for how much waste we produce," said
University of Georgia environmental engineering professor Jenna
Jambeck.
The researchers calculated that 275 million tons of plastic waste
was generated in the 192 coastal countries that year, with an
estimated 8 million tons entering the ocean and a possible range
between 4.8 million and 12.7 million tons.
"The most pressing need is to capture plastic waste to prevent it
from entering the environment," Law said. "This means investing in
waste management infrastructure, especially in those countries with
rapidly developing economies."
"In high-income countries, we also have a responsibility to reduce
the amount of waste, especially plastic waste, that we produce," she
added.
The research was published in the journal Science.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|