The Guardian (USA)

‘Oil spills of our time’: experts sound alarm about plastic lost in cargo ship disasters

- Karen McVeigh

Container ship accidents at sea should be considered the “oil spills of our time”, warned environmen­tal organisati­ons that found a toxic mix of metals, carcinogen­ic and other harmful chemicals on plastic washed up on Sri Lanka’s beaches after a cargo ship fire.

When the X-Press Pearl sank off nine nautical miles off Colombo, Sri Lanka’s capital, in May 2021, the most “significan­t harm” from the country’s worst maritime disaster initially came from the spillage of 1,680 tonnes of plastic pellets, or “nurdles”, into the Indian Ocean. They were found in dead dolphins, fish and on beaches – in some places 2 metres deep. A UN report called it the “single largest plastic spill” in history.

But a new study, from Sri Lanka’s Centre for Environmen­tal Justice (CEJ) and the Internatio­nal Pollutants Eliminatio­n Network (IPEN), a coalition of NGOs in 124 countries, said the nurdle spill was the “tip of the iceberg” of environmen­tal harm from the accident.

Researcher­s analysed samples of nurdles and burnt lumps of plastic from four Sri Lankan beaches for heavy metals and various chemicals, including benzotriaz­ole UV-stabiliser­s, which are used to prevent discolorat­ion in plastics, bisphenols and polyaromat­ic hydrocarbo­ns (PAHs).

They found heavy metals as well as chemicals that both cause cancer and are “endocrine-disrupting”, or interferin­g with hormones. Of particular concern, they said, were levels of PAHs found on the burnt lumps, which far exceeded safe limits for consumer products set by the EU. For some substances, no level of exposure is considered safe.

Dr Therese Karlsson, a science adviser at IPEN and co-author of the study, said: “Until now, there hasn’t been any publicly available chemical analysis of the spill. The chemicals have largely been overlooked because they are not visible.”

While the nurdle spillage was “cata

strophic”, Karlsson said, it was “the tip of the iceberg” due to the chemicals present – in particular BPA, which is used to make plastic and epoxy resins.

“We found bisphenol-A (BPA), which is a probable human carcinogen and has been linked to everything from depression, to respirator­y disease, to breast and colon cancer,” she said. “It is also an endocrine disruptor.”

Of 1,486 containers carried on the vessel, 80 were classed as “dangerous goods” including caustic soda and nitric acid. The ship also carried epoxy resins, used in paints and primers, ethanol, and lead ingots, used to make vehicle batteries.

The study concluded that current legislatio­n and practices are insufficie­nt to mitigate the risk of poorly packaged chemicals on ships.

“Shipping is increasing, with 90% of the world’s trade moved by sea,” said Karlsson. “The cargo of these ships is so much more complex today. But the regulation­s have not kept up.”

Chalani Rubesinghe, of CEJ, said the disaster had exposed the complexity of shipping chemicals. “These accidents have huge consequenc­es on the environmen­t and economies,” she said.

The safety commission of the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on (IMO) has been discussing how to track containers and address the loss of pellets at sea.

Sri Lanka has asked the IMO to classify plastic pellets as toxic substances, and Vanuatu is calling for better reporting of containers lost at sea.

The Sri Lankan authoritie­s said this week that clearing the wreck and debris of the sunken ship would take four months. They have filed an interim claim for damages of $40m (£30m) with the operator of the X-Press Pearl.

 ?? ?? Sri Lankans look to salvage goods washed up from the wreck of the X-Press Pearl. It led to the ‘single largest plastic spill’ ever, the UN said. Photograph: Eranga Jaya
Sri Lankans look to salvage goods washed up from the wreck of the X-Press Pearl. It led to the ‘single largest plastic spill’ ever, the UN said. Photograph: Eranga Jaya

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