Hindustan Times (East UP)

UN: Plastic waste is endangerin­g migratory species in Asia-Pacific

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com AFP/FILE

PARIS: From endangered freshwater dolphins drowned by discarded fishing nets to elephants scavenging through rubbish, migratory species are among the most vulnerable to plastic pollution, a UN report on the Asia-Pacific region said on Tuesday, calling for greater action to cut waste.

Plastic particles have infiltrate­d even the most remote and seemingly-pristine regions of the planet, with tiny fragments discovered inside fish in the deepest recesses of the ocean and peppering Arctic sea ice.

The paper by the UN’s Convention on the Conservati­on of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) focused on the impacts of plastic on freshwater species in rivers and on land animals and birds, which researcher­s said were often overlooked victims of humanity’s expanding trash crisis. It said that because these creatures encounter different environmen­ts - including industrial­ised and polluted areas - they are likely at risk of higher exposure to plastics and associated contaminan­ts.

Researcher­s cited estimates that 80% of the plastic that ends up in the oceans originates on land - with rivers thought to play a key role in carrying debris out to sea. The report comes just days ahead of a major summit of the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN), which will include a motion calling for an end to marine plastic pollution by 2030.

“Actions to address this global issue have fallen far short of what is needed,” said CMS executive secretary Amy Fraenkel.

“The focus has thus far been on clean up in our oceans, but that is already too late in the process. We need to focus on solutions and prevention of plastic pollution upstream.”

 ??  ?? A flock of birds fly over plastic waste at a collection site in Alue Lim village in Lhokseumaw­e, Indonesia.
A flock of birds fly over plastic waste at a collection site in Alue Lim village in Lhokseumaw­e, Indonesia.

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