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Millions of tonnes of plastic trash clog oceans

Update : 13 Feb 2015, 06:37 PM

The world’s oceans are clogged with plastic debris, but how much of it finds its way into the seas annually? Enough to place the equivalent of five grocery bags full of plastic trash on every foot (30 cm) of every nation’s coastline around the globe.

That is according to scientists who released research on Thursday estimating that a staggering 8 million metric tonnes 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 tonnes 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 tonnes, about 30% 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 industrialised nation in the top 20, and it ranked number 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.

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.

The researchers calculated that 275 million tonnes of plastic waste was generated in the 192 coastal countries that year, with an estimated 8 million tonnes entering the ocean and a possible range between 4.8 million and 12.7 million tonnes.

“The most pressing need is to capture plastic waste to prevent it from entering the environment,” said Kara Lavender Law, a research professor of oceanography with the Massachusetts-based Sea Education Association.

“This means investing in waste management infrastructure, especially in those countries with rapidly developing economies.” 

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