The Independent on Saturday

FACE MASKS JOIN LIST OF POLLUTERS

- TANYA WATERWORTH tanya.waterworth@inl.co.za

AN ESTIMATED 3.4 billion single-use face masks are being discarded daily across the world as a result of the Covid pandemic and exacerbati­ng the levels of plastic waste to “unmanageab­le levels”.

Ahead of the annual Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-Up Day today, Wessa (Wildlife and Environmen­t Society of South Africa) chief executive officer, Dr Andrew Baxter, who has just taken over the reins, said the pandemic had caused a major setback in efforts to reduce the volume of plastic waste accumulati­ng in rivers and oceans.

“Recent studies indicate that millions of discarded single-use plastics (masks, gloves, aprons and bottles of sanitisers) now contribute substantia­lly to the scourge of plastic waste worldwide and sadly, South Africa is no exception.

“The unanticipa­ted occurrence of a pandemic of this scale has resulted in unmanageab­le levels of biomedical plastic waste, and it is estimated that about 3.4 billion single-use face masks are discarded daily, globally.

“Like most single-use plastics, these products invariably end up in the river systems and the oceans and will persist for many years to come as they gradually disintegra­te into microplast­ics,” said Baxter.

He added while there were visible pollutants such as oil spills and plastic pollution, there were also less visible chemical pollutants, such as pesticides, herbicides, fertiliser­s, detergents, industrial chemicals and raw sewage in the water.

“We’ve seen horrific spills of toxic chemicals in KZN polluting the rivers, estuaries and the Durban coastline after a fire at a chemical warehouse in Cornubia,” said Baxter, who is based in Cape Town. He also raised concern over sewage wastage in the Cape and failure to manage waste disposal in Makhanda in the Eastern Cape. He said this “will invariably find its way to the pristine Wild Coast along such rivers as the Great Fish”.

Baxter urged people to lend a helping hand in today’s Coastal Clean-Up, saying “a one-hour walk on the beach collecting rubbish can make a difference”.

Ten years ago, it took five people and 300 bags of collected waste a week to keep the uMngeni estuary clean: now the amount of pollution is “insurmount­able”.

This is according to Wessa KZN Region’s Margaret Burger, whose team – along with many environmen­tal NPOs and conservati­on groups – will be out cleaning beaches and rivers in the province for the Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-Up Day, which sees volunteers across the world collecting rubbish.

Earlier this week, the Wessa crew were in the mangrove swamp in the uMngeni River estuary area, where 2-litre plastic bottles, pieces of polystyren­e used for fast food packaging and Covid-19 disposable masks were among the litter clogging the banks.

Collecting the waste items in the mud, Burger said every time it rained, litter came from upriver settlement­s and stormwater drains, accompanie­d by raw sewage.

“There’s a lot of dirty rubbish here which even the recyclers don’t want. As there’s no natural flooding of the rivers anymore, the mud flats are increasing and the mangroves are moving upstream which has seen a decrease in birds,” said Burger.

NPO Adopt-A-River director Janet Simpkins said the major issue was plastic bottles coming from upstream, and they had even picked up discarded sealed packets of antiretrov­iral medicine. Adopt-A-River organises the Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-Up Day in the estuary.

The Adopt-A-River team collects waste from the estuary every day, and Simpkins said for Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-Up Day they would count different waste items. This informatio­n would be sent to research organisati­ons, which collated the data to identify pollutants and underlying causes.

Also this week, UN chief Antonio Guterres called for “immediate, rapid and large-scale” cuts in greenhouse gas emissions to curb global warming and avert climate disaster.

Ahead of the annual UN General Assembly meeting scheduled for next week, Guterres fired a warning to government­s that climate change was proceeding faster than expected and fossil fuel emissions had already bounced back from pandemic lows.

For more informatio­n on Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-Up Day, go to the Adopt-A-River Facebook page.

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 ?? | SHELLEY KJONSTAD ?? CLEANING up in the uMngeni estuary this week ahead of Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-Up Day are, from left: Nontuthuko Nsibande, Bongiwe Tsotetsi, Rosemary Harrison, Melisa Nonjiko, Margaret Burger and Boysie Mzobe. African News Agency (ANA)
| SHELLEY KJONSTAD CLEANING up in the uMngeni estuary this week ahead of Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-Up Day are, from left: Nontuthuko Nsibande, Bongiwe Tsotetsi, Rosemary Harrison, Melisa Nonjiko, Margaret Burger and Boysie Mzobe. African News Agency (ANA)

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