The Province

Province urged to help keep plastic pellets out of water

- SUSAN LAZARUK

Hundreds of thousands of tiny plastic pellets used to make bags, bottles and other plastic items are being washed into B.C. waterways and the province isn’t doing enough to stop it, says a group dedicated to cleaning up beaches.

Surfrider Canada says it has evidence pellets are being spilled at manufactur­ing plants and during transport and are making their way into the water at dozens of locations it monitors around B.C.

The U.S.-based internatio­nal environmen­tal group held a news conference on Annacis Island near a water channel, and David Boudinot of its Vancouver Island chapter knelt on the riverbank to show how the round pellets, which are smaller than a lentil, can be easily found in the grass.

He held a small jam jar full of the pellets, collected last month as far away as Nigei Island, north of Port Hardy.

Volunteers have collected pellets from 90 locations, in the Fraser River and on shores around Metro Vancouver, from the San Juan and Gulf Islands, around Vancouver Island and along the Sunshine Coast, he said.

He said his group investigat­ed manufactur­ing and transport sites.

“You go to where they’re used and there is spillage. If there’s a spill on the parking lot, once it rains, it goes down there,” he said, pointing to the water while a group of mallards paddled by. “You go look at their storm drains and you see all the pellets.”

Surfrider picked Annacis Island because there are three plants that manufactur­e the pellets on the island, he said. The group didn’t identify the companies.

He said plants should be required to properly cover storm drains, as they do at constructi­on sites.

“Prevention is key,” he said. “There’s a clear solution.”

And he said manufactur­ers or transporte­rs should contain the spills, which he called a “solidified oil spill” because the pellets are petroleum-based.

“If a company spilled oil, they would be fined, yet you solidify the oil and you can release that into the water? That’s crazy.”

He said companies need to clean up spills or face fines.

“It’s the responsibi­lity of the province of B.C. to enforce environmen­tal protection laws and to improve environmen­tal protection laws,” said Boudinot. “There are no regulation­s specifical­ly for plastic pellets.”

He said, “We’ve shared our evidence of the problem with the province” and they were told the province is holding public consultati­on on plastic pollution.

But Boudinot said it’s an industry problem, not a consumer problem, and “I don’t think we’ll be able to recycle our way out of plastic pellet pollution.”

B.C.’s Environmen­t Ministry didn’t make anyone available to comment but said in an email “Discharge of pollution to the environmen­t is prohibited under the environmen­tal management act.”

The ministry said it had been unaware of the problem of plastic pellets in B.C. waters.

The province is “working to reduce plastics in the marine environmen­t” and is assessing its next steps, but staff didn’t provide specifics.

Requests for comment from B.C. plastics companies on Annacis Island were not returned, and the Canadian Plastics Industry Associatio­n in Ontario didn’t return messages. Its website said it has signed a joint declaratio­n with 46 plastics industry organizati­ons worldwide to prevent marine litter.

Its Operation Clean Sweep, “an internatio­nal program designed to prevent pellet, flake and powder loss,” which it said could harm sea life and wildlife, encourages members to take a voluntary pledge to “prevent resin pellet loss in the environmen­t.”

Of the more than 130 Canadian companies listed as having taken the pledge, five are in B.C.

 ??  ?? Surfrider Canada’s David Boudinot scoops up plastic pellets at Annacis Island Friday. He says rules are needed to stop industries that allow plastic to reach waterways.
Surfrider Canada’s David Boudinot scoops up plastic pellets at Annacis Island Friday. He says rules are needed to stop industries that allow plastic to reach waterways.

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