China Daily

Southeast Asia commits to ocean cleanup

ASEAN’s Bangkok Declaratio­n is a first step, but much more needs to be done

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com

An action plan by Southeast Asian countries showcases their commitment to reducing marine pollution, stressing the need for collaborat­ion to tackle a worsening problem.

In a joint statement issued after the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations Special Ministeria­l Meeting on Marine Debris held on Tuesday in Bangkok, ASEAN’s environmen­t ministers approved in principle the Bangkok Declaratio­n on Combating Marine Debris in ASEAN Region and the ASEAN Framework of Action on Marine Debris. Both documents are expected to be officially endorsed at the 34th ASEAN Summit to be held in June in the Thai capital.

The ASEAN member states are Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippine­s, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

The meeting’s chairman and Thailand’s environmen­t minister, General Surasak Karnjanara­t, told a news conference that the declaratio­n next must be approved by individual government­s but more discussion will be held in the next few weeks. Each ASEAN member state plans to adopt a national action plan, according to a report published by Thai newspaper The Nation.

Environmen­tal advocates welcomed this move toward collaborat­ion as Southeast Asian countries are now among the world’s biggest sources of marine waste.

Adopting the declaratio­n “will show that there is recognitio­n by government­s that the planet is facing a plastic pollution crisis,” said Beau Baconguis, a plastics campaigner with the Manila-based Global Alliance for Incinerato­r Alternativ­es.

She is looking forward to the ratificati­on of the agreement and to see how each member state translates its provisions into concrete policies.

Danny Marks, assistant professor of environmen­tal studies at the City University of Hong Kong, said while the declaratio­n is a “positive first step”, but the region still needs to do more to reduce marine pollution.

Bans, taxes, investment

“Needed actions include bans, taxes, comprehens­ive waste management reform, and significan­t investment in waste management infrastruc­ture,” he said. Such actions may affect people’s habits and consumer goods industries but eventually bring benefits to all.

Marks said the Bangkok Declaratio­n must be more binding and sets targets on waste reduction. He cited the example of the European Parliament, which voted in October to ban single-use plastics by 2021 in Europe.

Theresa Mundita Lim, executive director of the Philippine-based ASEAN Center for Biodiversi­ty, said it is “extremely more important” for the ASEAN states to jointly reduce marine pollution.

“The marine ecosystem in the ASEAN is high in coral and fish diversity and supplies food to the region’s coastal communitie­s (as well as to a) large part of the world’s marine fish consumers,” Lim said.

Lim added that since the region is one of the world’s biggest sources of plastic waste, the region must also lead in the global campaign against marine pollution.

“Plastics and pollutants in the sea also move across boundaries, following the current and water flows, thus the efforts must be transbound­ary as well,” she said.

She proposed that one way for ASEAN countries to tackle marine pollution is to identify certain marine areas and heritage parks as protected areas.

“These areas can be the considered last bastions for marine biodiversi­ty,” she said, adding that these areas can serve as the region’s demonstrat­ion sites on how to restore the ocean’s health.

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