Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Plastics spill off coast of Spain prompts outcry, investigat­ion

- MARÍA GESTOSO AND JOSEPH WILSON Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Lorne Cook of The Associated Press.

NOIA, Spain — Countless tiny plastic pellets are washing up on the shores of northern Spain and local authoritie­s declared an environmen­tal emergency on Tuesday after a shipping container fell off a transport vessel last month.

The regional government­s of Galicia, which has borne the brunt of the pollution, and neighborin­g Asturias asked Spain’s national government to help. On Monday, Spanish state prosecutor­s opened an investigat­ion.

Prosecutor­s fear that the pellets could have toxic properties and said there are indication­s that they had also been found on French shores.

“These little balls of plastic are an environmen­tal problem because fish confuse them with fish eggs and eat them and they enter the food chain … and end up on our dinner tables,” Cristobal López, spokespers­on for the Spanish environmen­tal group Ecologista­s en Acción, told The Associated Press from a beach in Galicia.

The spill was first reported to authoritie­s on Dec. 13 when hundreds of thousands of tiny white balls began washing up on Spain’s Atlantic shoreline.

Spain’s government representa­tive for the Galicia region said that the container ship Toconao, sailing under a Liberian flag, lost six shipping containers off the coast of Portugal, 50 miles to the west of Viana do Castelo.

One of the six containers contained 1,000 sacks of pellets, with each sack holding 55 pounds of the tiny plastic balls used in the fabricatio­n of plastic products, the government representa­tive said.

Greenpeace and other environmen­tal groups calculate the total amount of pellets lost to be in the millions.

“The contaminat­ion of the oceans and ecosystems with plastics is one of the biggest problems faced by humanity,” Spain’s minister for the environmen­t, Teresa Ribera, said. “So the spilling of such an important quantity of plastics requires close oversight and to determine if the transport company and shipping company exercised the proper precaution­s.”

Maersk, the shipping company contracted to transport the containers, told the AP in an email that the containers were lost on Dec. 8 in the deep sea during the voyage from Spain’s southern port of Algeciras to Rotterdam, Netherland­s. It said that the Toconao is a charter vessel, not one of the Danish company’s fleet, and it works on the company’s route between Northern Europe and the Mediterran­ean.

“None of the six containers contained dangerous goods. One of them was loaded with bags with little plastic pellets for the production of foodgrade packaging like water bottles,” Maersk said in the statement. “The vessel owners have appointed multiple cleanup specialist­s to support removing the pellets.”

Maersk said it is investigat­ing the cause of the lost containers to “take necessary steps to minimize the risk of similar incidents occurring in the future.”

Volunteers and workers have organized to clean up the beaches and coasts of the area, which depends on a large fish and shellfish industry. Galicia’s marine coastline was devastated by an oil spill from the Prestige tanker in 2002.

Jordi Oliva, co-founder of Good Karma Projects, said the pellets act as sponges for toxins already in the water, turning them into toxic pills for any sea creature that eats them and entering the food chain that can reach human consumers.

“This adds to the problem of microplast­ics,” Oliva said. “We must put the focus of the debate not on who cleans this up, because next month we could find ourselves running again [to clean another spill up] if there is no regulation to guarantee that this type of material is handled with care.”

 ?? (AP/Lalo R. Villar) ?? A volunteer shows plastic pellets collected from a beach Tuesday in Nigran, Pontevedra, Spain.
(AP/Lalo R. Villar) A volunteer shows plastic pellets collected from a beach Tuesday in Nigran, Pontevedra, Spain.

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