The Borneo Post

Mediterran­ean could become a ‘sea of plastic’ — WWF

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MARSEILL: The Mediterran­ean could become a ‘sea of plastic’, the WWF warned yesterday in a report calling for measures to clean up one of the world’s worst affected bodies of water.

The WWF said the Mediterran­ean had record levels of ‘micro-plastics,’ the tiny pieces of plastic less than five millimetre­s in size which can be found increasing­ly in the food chain posing a threat to human health.

“The concentrat­ion of microplast­ics is nearly four times higher” in the Mediterran­ean compared with open seas elsewhere in the world, said the report ‘ Out of the Plastic Trap: Saving the Mediterran­ean from Plastic Pollution’.

The problem, as all over the world, is simply that plastics have become an essential part of our daily lives while recycling only accounts for a third of the waste in Europe.

Plastic represents 95 per cent of the waste floating in the Mediterran­ean and on its beaches, with most coming from Turkey and Spain, followed by Italy, Egypt and France, the report said.

To tackle the problem, there has to be an internatio­nal agreement to reduce the dumping of plastic waste and to help clear up the mess at sea, the WWF said.

All countries around the Mediterran­ean should boost recycling, ban single-use plastics such as bags and bottles, and phase out the use of micro plastics in detergents or cosmetics by 2025.

The plastics industry itself should develop recyclable and compostabl­e products made out of renewable raw materials, not chemicals derived from oil.

Indidvidua­ls too have their role to play, making personal choices such as to use combs or kitchen utensils made of wood, not plastic, the WWF said. — AFP

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