The Telegram (St. John's)

Fund helps pay for clean up of nearly 700 metric tonnes of lost fishing gear

- WA LONE

Lost fishing gear is a global problem, including in the upper Andaman Sea off Thailand, where an estimated 30 per cent of endangered marine life is affected by plastic pollution.

TORONTO — Canada said on Monday it helped pay for the removal of 695 metric tonnes of lost fishing gear in Atlantic Canada, which was hit by storm Fiona in 2022.

The storm surge swept up fishing equipment such as nets and rope, known as “ghost gear,” during Fiona, which reached Canada as a powerful post-tropical storm. The gear, a form of plastic pollution, threatens marine mammals and fisheries.

Fiona forced evacuation­s as wind gusts reached 170 kilometres per hour and the surge swallowed up homes on the coastline.

Canada announced results of the cleanup as global leaders gather in Ottawa this week to work on drafting a first-ever global treaty to rein in soaring plastic pollution.

The federal government helped pay for the cleanup from a $30-million fund it created after Fiona, Fisheries Minister Diane Lebouthill­ier said.

“Ghost gear threatens the sustainabi­lity of fisheries, which harms the economic prosperity of coastal communitie­s,” she said.

Lost fishing gear is a global problem, including in the upper Andaman Sea off Thailand, where an estimated 30 per cent of endangered marine life is affected by plastic pollution.

Canada is working on a plan to prevent fishing gear loss in the future, the fisheries department said.

Commercial fishers in Canada are required to report lost gear to the federal fisheries department.

Ingrid Giskes, senior director of Global Ghost Gear Initiative, the internatio­nal NGO for marine conservati­on group, said that abandoned fishing gear is the deadliest plastic pollution in the ocean.

“It’s made to capture and kill marine life and it will continue to do so after it’s lost” she said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? People head to their homes in the aftermath of hurricane Fiona in Burnt Islands, N.L., on Sept. 27, 2022.
REUTERS People head to their homes in the aftermath of hurricane Fiona in Burnt Islands, N.L., on Sept. 27, 2022.

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