Gulf News

Arctic sea ice loaded with microplast­ics

‘We didn’t expect this amount of plastic, we were shocked’

-

At first glance, it looks like hard candy laced with flecks of fake fruit, or a third-grader’s art project confected from recycled debris.

In reality, it’s a sliver of Arctic Ocean sea ice riddled with microplast­ics, extracted by scientists from deep inside an ice block that likely drifted southward past Greenland into Canada’s increasing­ly navigable Northwest Passage between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

“We didn’t expect this

amount of plastic, we were shocked,” said University of Rhode Island ice expert Alessandra D’Angelo, one of a dozen scientists collecting and analysing data during an 18-day expedition aboard the Swedish icebreaker Oden.

“There is so much of it, and of every kind — beads, filaments, nylons,” she told AFP from Greenland, days after completing the voyage.

Plastic pollution was not a primary focus of the Northwest Passage Project, funded by the US National Science Foundation and Heising-Simons Foundation.

Led by oceanograp­her Brice Loose, the multi-year mission is investigat­ing how global warming might transform the biochemist­ry and ecosystems of the expansive Canadian Arctic Archipelag­o.

‘PUNCH TO THE STOMACH’

One key question is whether the receding ice pack and influx of fresh water will boost the release into the atmosphere of methane, a greenhouse gas 30 times more potent that CO2.

The Arctic region has warmed twice as quickly as the global average, some two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

Average Arctic sea ice extent set a record low for July, nearly 20 per cent below the 19812010 average, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (NOAA) reported on Thursday.

But plastics has inserted itself onto the research agenda all the same.

“The ubiquity of plastic, for us it was kind of a punch to the stomach,” Loose said.

A study published Thursday in Science Advances concluded that a large quantity of microplast­ic fragments and fibres are transporte­d by winds into the Arctic region, and then hitch a ride Earthward in snowflakes.

 ?? AFP ?? At first glance, it looks like hard candy laced with flecks of fake fruit, or a third grader’s art project confected from recycled debris. In reality, it’s a sliver of Arctic Ocean ice riddled with microplast­ics. Scientists from Alfred Wegener Institute collect snow samples in the Arctic. They found that microplast­ic particles can be transporte­d tremendous distances through the atmosphere.
AFP At first glance, it looks like hard candy laced with flecks of fake fruit, or a third grader’s art project confected from recycled debris. In reality, it’s a sliver of Arctic Ocean ice riddled with microplast­ics. Scientists from Alfred Wegener Institute collect snow samples in the Arctic. They found that microplast­ic particles can be transporte­d tremendous distances through the atmosphere.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates