Millennium Post

Chemical pollution wreaks havoc

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As if climate change and environmen­tal pollution were not enough, it now transpires that chemical pollutants banned more than 40 years ago are still fatal. They are having a devastatin­g effect on marine

life and could lead to the disappeara­nce of half the world's killer whale population­s before the end of the century. A new study, published in the journal Science, has found that killer whales, or orcas, are most at risk from polychlori­nated biphenyls (PCBS), which were once widely used as coolants and in the production of carbonless copy paper before they were found to be highly toxic and carcinogen­ic. Production of PCBS was banned in the US in 1979 and under an internatio­nal treaty in 2001. But they are still in use in many parts of the world and not due to be completely phased out until 2025. This has led to PCBS seeping into the oceans where they present a particular risk to marine mammals at the top of the food chain like orcas. Because the chemicals do not readily break down, the concentrat­ion of them builds up in the bodies of predators as they eat more and more fish contaminat­ed with PCBS. For mammals, PCB contaminat­ion is inter-generation­al, with mothers passing the chemicals to their offspring through milk. Orcas are the

last link in a long food chain and are therefore among the most affected by this problem over the course of their 50 to 80-year

lifespan. Researcher­s found levels of PCB as high as 1,300 milligrams per kilo in the blubber of some orca, studies show that just 50 milligrams per kilo can cause infertilit­y and immune system problems. The situation is worst in Brazil, the Strait of Gibraltar, the northeast Pacific and around the British Isles, where Ailsa Hall of Scotland's Mammal Research Unit said: "we rarely observe newborn killer whales." Desforges added that it was "frightenin­g to see that models predict a high risk of population collapse in these areas within a period of 30-40 years." Under the Stockholm Convention, to which 152 countries around the world are signatorie­s, all PCB use is due to be phased out by 2025, and efforts are underway to deal with existing waste in an environmen­tally sound way. But study co-author Paul Jepson of the UK'S Institute of Zoology said the new research showed that current efforts "have not been effective enough to avoid the accumulati­on of PCBS in species that live as long as the killer whale does." ORCA, a Uk-based charity which studies and protects whales and other marine mammals in Europe, described the findings as an "absolutely tragic state of affairs" and one that needs immediate action.

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