Plastic and other Environmental Dangerous Waste

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Plastic junk spawns desert island disaster in Pacific

2019-07-31 11:11 | AFP

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A beach clean-up team member collecting rubbish from a beach on Henderson Island, an uninhabited member of the Pitcairn Islands archipelago in the South Pacific Ocean. (Iain McGregor, AFP)

Floating plastic garbage has swamped a remote Pacific island once regarded as an environmental jewel and scientists say little can be done to save it while a throwaway culture persists.

Henderson Island is an uninhabited coral atoll that lies almost exactly halfway between New Zealand and Peru, with 5 500km of ocean in either direction.

Despite its extreme isolation, a freak confluence of geography and ocean currents means Henderson has one of the highest concentrations of plastic pollution on the planet.

"We found debris from just about everywhere," said Jennifer Lavers, an Australian-based researcher who led an expedition to the island last month.

"We had bottles and containers, all kinds of fishing stuff and it had come from, well, you name it - Germany, Canada, the United States, Chile, Argentina, Ecuador.

"It was a real message that every country has a responsibility to protect the environment, even in these remote areas."

Henderson lies at the centre of the South Pacific gyre, a vast circular ocean current that runs anti-clockwise down the east coast of Australia and up the west coast of South America.

The gyre should be a boon for the 10km-by-five speck of land, carrying rich nutrients into the waters surrounding Henderson to feed huge colonies of sea birds.

The atoll's ecosystem is so rich that Henderson was included on the UN World Heritage List in 1988, with the body hailing it as an untouched paradise.

"As one of the last near-pristine limestone islands of significant size in the world, Henderson Island retains its exceptional natural beauty with its white, sandy beaches, limestone cliffs, and rich and almost undisturbed vegetation," it said.

South Pacific garbage patch

But three decades later, the gyre has become a marine conveyor belt dumping endless waves of plastic detritus onto Henderson's coast, making it the hub of what has become known as the South Pacific Garbage Patch.

Lavers led her first expedition there in 2015 and on the island's East Beach found there were about 700 items of plastic per square metre, one of the highest concentrations found anywhere in the world.

Compounding the problem, the churning waves have reduced more than half the waste to tiny particles almost invisible to the human eye, making them impossible to clean up but easily digested by wildlife such as birds and turtles.

Lavers organised a clean-up effort on her most recent trip to the island last month and her team collected six tonnes of plastic garbage from the beach over two gruelling weeks.

They were unable to take away the rubbish because their ship could not find a safe mooring on the rugged coastline, instead storing it above the high-tide line for future removal.

Lavers admitted it was "heartbreaking" to make such a mammoth effort only to see more garbage floating ashore where they had just cleaned.

"We'd be having our lunch and watching it replenish in real time as things like buoys and bits of rope washed onto the beach," she said.

The marine scientist, who plans further trips to Henderson in 2020 and 2021, said the experience underlined the fact that clean-ups were not a long-term solution to the ocean's pollution crisis.

"It just speaks to the importance of shutting off the tap at the source," she said, calling for tighter restrictions on single-use plastics.

"There's already so much debris in the oceans, we really need to do all we can to prevent any more getting out there."


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Re: Plastic and other Environmental Dangerous Waste

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Could Mexico cactus solve world's plastics problem?

2019-08-07 11:37

phpBB [video]

Could Mexico cactus solve world's plastics problem?
A research in Mexico is developing a promising solution to the world's single-use packaging conundrum: making biodegradable plastic from prickly pear cactus.

Mexico's prickly pear cactus, which is emblazoned on the country's flag, could soon play a new and innovative role in the production of biodegradable plastics.

A packaging material that is made from the plant has been developed by a Mexican researcher and is offering a promising solution to one of the world's biggest pollution conundrums.

"The pulp is strained to obtain a juice that I then use," said Sandra Pascoe, who developed the product and works at the Atemajac Valley University in the western city of Guadalajara.

That substance is then mixed with non-toxic additives and stretched to produce sheets which are colored with pigments and folded to form different types of packaging.

"What we're doing is trying to concentrate on objects that don't have a long life," she said, particularly "single-use" packaging.

Pascoe is still conducting tests, but hopes to patent her product later this year and look for partners in early 2020, with an eye towards larger-scale production.

The cacti Pascoe uses for her experiments come from San Esteban, a small town on the outskirts of Guadalajara, where they grow by the hundreds.

San Esteban is located in Jalisco state where, starting next year, single-use non-recyclable plastic bags, straws and other disposable items will be banned.

'Drop in the ocean'

Mexico City and states such as Baja California have also introduced similar measures.

In May, the capital city adopted a "historic" ban on plastic bags beginning in 2020. From 2021, straws, plastic plates and cutlery, and balloons will also be banned if they're made "entirely or partially from plastic", according to the bill adopted by the local congress.

Pascoe says her new material would be no more than a "drop in the ocean" in the battle to preserve the environment.

Given the rampant production of industrial plastics and the time it takes to make her material, there would need to be "other recycling strategies" to make any concrete difference, she said.

Latin America and the Caribbean account for around 10% of worldwide waste, according to United Nations figures.

In March, UN member states committed to "significantly reduce" single-use plastics over the next decade, although green groups warned that goal fell short of tackling the Earth's pollution crisis.

Plastic pollution has become a global concern, particularly after bans imposed by China and other countries on the import of plastic waste from overseas.

Despite widespread alarm on the environmental cost, Asia and the United States lifted world production of plastic last year while Europe saw a dip, according to numbers released by the PlasticsEurope federation in June.

More than eight million tons of plastics enter the world's oceans every year.


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Re: Plastic and other Environmental Dangerous Waste

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Could Mexico cactus solve world's plastics problem?

2019-08-07 11:37

phpBB [video]

Could Mexico cactus solve world's plastics problem?
A research in Mexico is developing a promising solution to the world's single-use packaging conundrum: making biodegradable plastic from prickly pear cactus.

Mexico's prickly pear cactus, which is emblazoned on the country's flag, could soon play a new and innovative role in the production of biodegradable plastics.

A packaging material that is made from the plant has been developed by a Mexican researcher and is offering a promising solution to one of the world's biggest pollution conundrums.

"The pulp is strained to obtain a juice that I then use," said Sandra Pascoe, who developed the product and works at the Atemajac Valley University in the western city of Guadalajara.

That substance is then mixed with non-toxic additives and stretched to produce sheets which are colored with pigments and folded to form different types of packaging.

"What we're doing is trying to concentrate on objects that don't have a long life," she said, particularly "single-use" packaging.

Pascoe is still conducting tests, but hopes to patent her product later this year and look for partners in early 2020, with an eye towards larger-scale production.

The cacti Pascoe uses for her experiments come from San Esteban, a small town on the outskirts of Guadalajara, where they grow by the hundreds.

San Esteban is located in Jalisco state where, starting next year, single-use non-recyclable plastic bags, straws and other disposable items will be banned.

'Drop in the ocean'

Mexico City and states such as Baja California have also introduced similar measures.

In May, the capital city adopted a "historic" ban on plastic bags beginning in 2020. From 2021, straws, plastic plates and cutlery, and balloons will also be banned if they're made "entirely or partially from plastic", according to the bill adopted by the local congress.

Pascoe says her new material would be no more than a "drop in the ocean" in the battle to preserve the environment.

Given the rampant production of industrial plastics and the time it takes to make her material, there would need to be "other recycling strategies" to make any concrete difference, she said.

Latin America and the Caribbean account for around 10% of worldwide waste, according to United Nations figures.

In March, UN member states committed to "significantly reduce" single-use plastics over the next decade, although green groups warned that goal fell short of tackling the Earth's pollution crisis.

Plastic pollution has become a global concern, particularly after bans imposed by China and other countries on the import of plastic waste from overseas.

Despite widespread alarm on the environmental cost, Asia and the United States lifted world production of plastic last year while Europe saw a dip, according to numbers released by the PlasticsEurope federation in June.

More than eight million tons of plastics enter the world's oceans every year.


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Re: Plastic and other Environmental Dangerous Waste

Post by Lisbeth »

And when the prickly pear cactus is extinct? O**


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‘Punch in the gut’ as scientists find micro plastic in Arctic ice

By Reuters• 14 August 2019

LONDON, Aug 14 (Reuters) - Tiny pieces of plastic have been found in ice cores drilled in the Arctic by a U.S.-led team of scientists, underscoring the threat the growing form of pollution poses to marine life in even the remotest waters on the planet.

* Expedition finds microplastics in Northwest Passage

* Fears over impact on marine food chain

* Separate study says microplastics spread by snowfall

* Questions over impact on human health (Adds publication of study on microplastics and snow)

By Matthew Green

The researchers used a helicopter to land on ice floes and retrieve the samples during an 18-day icebreaker expedition through the Northwest Passage, the hazardous route linking the Pacific and Atlantic oceans.

“We had spent weeks looking out at what looks so much like pristine white sea ice floating out on the ocean,” said Jacob Strock, a graduate student researcher at the University of Rhode Island, who conducted an initial onboard analysis of the cores.

“When we look at it up close and we see that it’s all very, very visibly contaminated when you look at it with the right tools — it felt a little bit like a punch in the gut,” Strock told Reuters by telephone on Wednesday.

Strock and his colleagues found the material trapped in ice taken from Lancaster Sound, an isolated stretch of water in the Canadian Arctic, which they had assumed might be relatively sheltered from drifting plastic pollution.

The team drew 18 ice cores of up to 2 metres (6.5 feet) long from four locations and saw visible plastic beads and filaments of various shapes and sizes.

“The plastic just jumped out in both its abundance and its scale,” said Brice Loose, an oceanographer at the University of Rhode Island and chief scientist of the expedition, known as the Northwest Passage Project.

The scientists’ dismay is reminiscent of the consternation felt by explorers who found plastic waste in the Pacific Ocean’s Marianas Trench, the deepest place on Earth, during submarine dives earlier this year.

The Northwest Passage Project is primarily focused on investigating the impact of manmade climate change on the Arctic, whose role as the planet’s cooling system is being compromised by the rapid vanishing of summer sea ice.

But the plastic fragments — known as microplastic — also served to highlight how the waste problem has reached epidemic proportions. The United Nations estimates that 100 million tonnes of plastic have been dumped in the oceans to date.

The researchers said the ice they sampled appeared to be at least a year old and had probably drifted into Lancaster Sound from more central regions of the Arctic.

PLASTIC SNOWFALL

The team plans to subject the samples to further analysis to support a broader research effort to understand the damage plastic is doing to fish, seabirds and large ocean mammals such as whales.

Funded by the National Science Foundation and the Heising-Simons Foundation in the United States, the expedition in the Swedish icebreaker The Oden ran from July 18 to Aug. 4 and covered some 2,000 nautical miles.

Separately, German and Swiss scientists published a study on Wednesday based on samples from the Arctic, Swiss Alps and Germany that suggested microplastic is being blown vast distances through the air and dumped when it snows.

The team from the Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research found that snow collected on the Norwegian Arctic archipelago of Svalbard contained up to 14,400 particles of plastic per litre. The study found its highest concentration of particles — 154,000 particles per litre — near a rural road in the German federal state of Bavaria.

Melanie Bergmann, a marine ecologist who co-led the research, published in Science Advances, said much of the large amounts of microplastic found in the Arctic in previous studies had probably been carried there through the atmosphere.

“Once we’ve determined that large quantities of microplastic can also be transported by the air, it naturally raises the question as to whether and how much plastic we’re inhaling,” Bergmann said in a statement.

(Reporting by Matthew Green; Editing by James Drummond and Lisa Shumaker)


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Gansbaai fights back against plastic waste

Friday 16 August 2019 - 1:30pm

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Gansbaai in the Western Cape is struggling to cope with refuse spilling into the sea but marine biologists are fighting back. Courtesy of #DSTV403

CAPE TOWN - Gansbaai in the Western Cape is struggling to cope with refuse spilling into the sea but marine biologists are fighting back.

They have installed a litter-catching stormwater net, the first of what they hope will be many.

There are 63 stormwater drains in Gansbaai but they pose a major threat to marine life because they transport not only water but also, waste.

Biologists from Marine Dynamics are taking action.

Marine biologist, Allison Towner, said, "we've recently necropsied an African penguin which was dead, because of plastic in its stomach causing ulcerations."

Towner explained the biologists have installed a specialised storm drain with a net.

Due to the influx of litter into the ocean, the net has to be changed daily.

Cigarette butts, plastic and paper are among the most common items collected.

They are pleading with communities to also take a stand.

Five more of these drains are expected to be installed across the area in hopes of minimising sea pollution.

Source
eNCA


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Vivid student protest highlights how plastic is choking oceans

Unusual piece of performance art helps drive home Greenpeace Africa message

BY HERALD CORRESPONDENT - 29 August 2019

Image
Student and performance artist Luke Rudman, front, dressed 10 models in outfits made from rubbish in a Greenpeace collaboration at NMU on Wednesday. Alexia Kalenga sits next to him as fellow models look on | Image: Eugene Coetzee

A shoal of sea monsters invaded Nelson Mandela University on Wednesday afternoon in an unusual piece of performance art devised by a first-year student for Greenpeace Africa.

Port Elizabeth art student Luke Rudman, 19, has been working for several months on the fashion-show-cum-political-protest to draw attention to the dangers of plastic pollution.

His event saw 12 body-painted models clad in aquatic costumes crafted from rubbish walk around the university’s south campus in Summerstrand to raise awareness of how to protect the ocean.

“I’m incredibly excited – I never worked on a body of work in secret for so long and I’ve been itching to share it,” he said of the event.

Rudman said it was part of the university’s Tributories Project, driven by philosophy lecturer Professor Andrea Hurst – who also modelled in the show – which focused on the use and abuse of water.

The eco-collaboration has the stamp of approval from Greenpeace Africa, which is giving Rudman an Instagram “takeover” for 10 days to highlight the dangers of plastic pollution to the environment.

“I’ll do a post on one creature a day and finish with a video about the project,” Rudman said.

Port Elizabeth eco-NGO the Sustainable Seas Trust also partnered with the artist.

Rudman has more than 10,000 followers on Instagram for his @Pseudellusion feed, where he posts images of his art, and Greenpeace Africa has 20,000 on @Greenpeaceafrica.

“Hopefully, there are a lot of things that will come out of this.

“This falls into a larger Greenpeace campaign where they are sending ships from pole to pole as part of their Protect the Oceans expedition.

“Plastic pollution is part of that and that’s where I fit in.”

Greenpeace ships Esperanza and Arctic Sunrise are travelling from the Arctic to the Antarctic to research climate change, overfishing, plastic pollution, deep-sea mining and drilling.

This is the first time Rudman has tackled such a large project since he hit the headlines with his body art in 2018 while in matric at Grey High School.

Rudman enrolled at NMU to do a BA in visual arts earlier in 2019.

Each person or art piece in the performance took about two hours to paint and dress, and he worked on the costumes for several months.

Documenting the performance is important as each artwork only lasts as long as the model is wearing the makeup and costume.

However, a live model had other benefits, Rudman said.

“If you are your own exhibition, you can take your art into spaces that it wouldn’t normally go into.”

Zama Ngeyane, 18, and Moses Mtsweni, 27, were among the students who stopped to watch and take photographs outside the Kraal.

“The awareness behind it is beautiful; it shows that there is so much one can do with what we see as waste,” Mtsweni said.

Ngeyane said of the performance: “It’s just ‘wow’ because it’s educational and artistic.

“You can see it has to do with recycling – it’s about how plastic is killing the oceans.”

Model Hurst, dressed as a white angel tainted by plastic pollution, said the Tributories Project also highlighted environmental concerns.

“We did a three-day water pilgrimage and each pilgrim had to offer a response and this is Luke’s response.”

Model Mmeli Mdala, a second-year fashion student, said he enjoyed getting into character as a seaweed monster model.

“They are warning us every day that the earth is dying but people don’t seem to take it seriously,” Mdala said.

“We live in a windy city, so we have to be careful how we recycle plastic or more of it will end up in the sea.”


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Re: Plastic and other Environmental Dangerous Waste

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Paddlers discover 'sea of plastic' in Cape Town river

2019-09-10 17:15
Aletta Harrison


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Paddlers were horrified when they came across a heavily polluted stretch in the Black River in Cape Town on Sunday. The Peninsula Paddle is a survey of the city's waterways that has taken place annually for the last 10 years.

An annual survey of Cape Town's rivers has uncovered "appalling" levels of pollution in the city's waterways.

The Peninsula Paddle, which took place over the weekend, was started in 2010 to highlight the state of the canals, rivers and lakes between Muizenberg and Woodstock.

Since then the City of Cape Town and the Invasive Species Unit made great strides in tackling solid waste and alien water weeds.

But kayakers were left "horrified" by the pollution they encountered on the route, in particular a giant garbage patch in the Black River.

"On Sunday afternoon, as we came through this section… we were absolutely flabbergasted," Dr Kevin Winter, one of the founders of the initiative, told News24.

Winter is an environmental scientist at the University of Cape Town and a water expert at the university's Future Water Institute.

"We were dodging all kinds of things – dead cats, dead dogs, all kinds of crazy stuff that we picked up… people won't believe what ends up in those canals or rivers…"

But the plastic waste and water hyacinth clogging a section of the Black River left the whole team shocked.

"It's just a sea of plastic… it is the worst we've ever seen," Winter said.

'We were paddling in raw sewage at one point'

"The other place for us that was really bad was in the Steenberg canal… I don't think we've ever seen it as bad as that - just whole islands of rubbish that we were paddling through, or walking through, because we couldn't paddle…"

Scientists also took water samples and found E.coli bacteria exceeded 1 million colony forming units (cfu) per 100 ml. Winter said recreational users shouldn't be exposed to more than 1 000 cfu per 100ml and expressed concern about the risks to anyone coming into contact with the water.

"We were paddling in raw sewage at one point," he said.

"It's absolutely appalling."

Image
Kayakers make their way down Cape Town's rivers during the 2019 Peninsula Paddle. (Kevin Winter)

Winter warned that the pollution would find its way into Table Bay with the next rainfall unless something was done about it.

"And when it goes out to sea and we think we've lost it altogether, we need to think again… if we pollute our oceans… how are we expected to run desalination plants? How are we expected to create water from polluted water into drinking water? It's insane."

Winter said he hoped highlighting the deterioration would be a wake-up call, not only to the city, but to residents who discard pollutants into the rivers.

"The health of the city is seen in its waterways and what I mean by that is when you look at rivers like this you can see that our city is really unhealthy."


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Re: Plastic and other Environmental Dangerous Waste

Post by Alf »

It's typical to SA 0*\

We don't care about the rivers or animals

We are money driven and we strive to be corrupt, anything else we don't care about O/


Next trip to the bush??

Let me think......................
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Re: Plastic and other Environmental Dangerous Waste

Post by Lisbeth »

luckily somebody does ;-)


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