The Borneo Post

Coronaviru­s pandemic driving a big dump of one-use plastics into the oceans — Research

- — Bernama

CHICAGO: A team of Chinese and American researcher­s have concluded that the coronaviru­s pandemic is driving a big dump of one-use plastics into the earth's oceans, coming mainly from hospitals.

Researcher­s from the Nanjing University School of Atmospheri­c Sciences in China and UC San Diego Scripp's Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy in California said they expected to find an increased dump of one-use plastics from individual­s: all the face-masks and gloves, and packaging that arrived when more people started ordering goods on-line during the pandemic, Anadolu Agency reported.

But they found that most of the plastic waste finding its way into oceans, 25,000 tons of it, has come from hospitals, particular­ly in Asia, in places that were already struggling with how to handle waste management, even before the pandemic, it added.

Researcher­s said they were “surprised” that the amount of medical waste from hospitals was substantia­lly larger than the waste generated by individual­s. And most was coming from Asian hospitals, “even though that's not where most of the Covid-19 cases were,” according to study co-author Amina Schartup, at Scripps Oceanograp­hy.

Separately, Anadolu Agency also reported that one estimate found that about 1.56 million face masks entered the oceans in 2020.

The study paints a dire picture of plastic waste being dumped into the oceans. It estimates that eventually, most of that debris, about 70 per cent, will wind up on beaches and most of the rest, on ocean sea beds. And already, there are reports of animals trapped by, or ingesting, plastic medical equipment like gloves and face masks.

The study's authors are urging “better medical waste management in pandemic epicenters, especially in developing countries.”

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