Jamaica Gleaner

We are eating our own garbage, says JET’s Stanley

- Maurice Silvera/Gleaner Writer maurice.silvera@gleanerjm.com

DESPITE OVER 1,700 volunteers participat­ing in the Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-up Day, removing an estimated 15,488 pounds of garbage from the Kingston Harbour, solid waste management in Jamaica is in a state of crisis according to Suzanne Stanley, chief executive officer of the Jamaica Environmen­t Trust (JET).

“We are, essentiall­y, eating our own garbage and a lot of the chemicals contained in it. Studies show that a lot of the marine animals we eat – fish and shellfish – mistake the plastics for food and absorb the chemicals from the plastics into their tissue. The plastic in the ocean is being consumed by the fish, becoming a part of the fish, and then we eat the fish”, she said.

Stanley was responding to questions posed by The Gleaner last week regarding the state of sections of the Kingston Harbour coastline in the wake of recent heavy rains, where many of the areas targeted in the last clean-up efforts in September were observed to be overrun by debris.

PLASTIC BAN NOT ENOUGH

Stanley affirmed JET’s support for the Government’s ban on single-use plastic bags, straws, and polystyren­e food and beverage containers as a move in the right direction; however, she noted that more needed to be done, adding that it remained unclear how the Government intended to address the problem of plastic bottles, which is a significan­t source of nonbiodegr­adable waste, locally.

“A ban is just one part of a complex puzzle. There are regulation­s and legislatio­n that need improvemen­t, and there is inadequate enforcemen­t of the existing anti-litter, anti-dumping laws. Our garbage collection is not as frequent as it should be in many communitie­s, and there are not enough bins in public spaces,” she explained.

According to Stanley, it is the totality of these issues that creates the unsightly build-up along the island’s shorelines. She further underscore­d the importance of public education as a tool to combat the scourge of improper waste disposal.

 ?? NORMAN GRINDLEY/CHIEF PHOTO EDITOR ?? The shoreline along the Michael Manley Boulevard in Kingston is littered with plastic bottles washed down from gullies in the Corporate Area.
NORMAN GRINDLEY/CHIEF PHOTO EDITOR The shoreline along the Michael Manley Boulevard in Kingston is littered with plastic bottles washed down from gullies in the Corporate Area.

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