Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Concerns grow as report shows plastic killing off our fish

- By Sandaran Rubatheesa­n

As Sri Lankan seas become increasing­ly polluted with plastic waste, contributi­ng to a 500 per cent depletion in fishing stocks, a pollution expert has called for more effective garbage management to avert a man-made disaster.

Four- fifths of microplast­ic waste ( extremely small pieces of plastic debris) found in our seas comes from the land, washed into the sea through canals and rivers, Environmen­t and Renewable Energy Marine Environmen­t Protection Authority ( MEPA) General Manager Dr. Terney Pradeep Kumara said.

“Only 20 per cent can be accounted as sea- originated wastage, due to fishermen dumping plastic in mid- sea and oil spills from ships,” Dr. Kumara said, citing MEPA research.

Dr. Kumara said his department is dedicated to showing people how significan­tly polythene and plastic contribute to marine pollution and how to think differentl­y about the use of these materials.

Initiative­s such as creating polythene-free coastal regions and awareness campaigns on reducing domestic plastic usage in homes are underway, Dr. Kumara said.

Concerns over the marine environmen­t have grown following an independen­t survey of Sri Lanka’s coastal marine resources – the first in 40 years – that found a 500 per cent rate of depletion of fish stocks due to immense pressure from factors such as over- fishing and microplast­ic contaminat­ion.

The survey, carried out on the Norwegian research vessel, Dr. Fridtjof Nansen, last year, was commission­ed by the National Aquatic Resources Agency (NARA) and supported by Norway’s Institute of Marine Research.

The preliminar­y report findings of the Nansen survey, released on Monday, state: “The results reveal that the waters around Sri Lanka are contaminat­ed with microplast­ics, and the vast majority of microplast­ics found are in the secondary category, indicating that the packaging material, industrial applicatio­ns, and fishing gear are major sources”.

“In the last fisheries stock survey carried out from 1978- 1980, it was estimated that demersal fish resources at seabed level were nearly 250,000 to 350,000 tonnes. However, our recent study found that a depletion to 53,000 tonnes as over- fishing, microplast­ic pollution and illegal fishing had a huge impact on the depleting marine resources over time,” the National Aquatic Resources Agency ( NARA) Senior Scientist Dr. Prabath Jayasinghe, co- leader of the marine survey, said.

During the survey, which covered one season of the year, microplast­ic particles were found throughout the survey area on all sampling stations. The highest concentrat­ions were found in the north- western region of Sri Lanka’s territoria­l waters.

A special joint operation by Ceylon Fisheries Corporatio­n, the coastguard service and the navy is under considerat­ion to ensure that fishermen stop dumping plastic bottles in the sea from their boats.

Once large piles of microplast­ic wastage are dumped in the sea, it becomes uninhabita­ble for the breeding activities of millions of fish, corals and other rich marine life.

Plastics in the oceans will outweigh fish by 2050, a report compiled by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation in partnershi­p with the World Economic Forum in 2016 predicted. It said plastic use had increased 20- fold in the last 50 years and is continuing to rise significan­tly.

Sri Lanka’s Excl u s ive Economic Zone (EEZ), which is eight times larger than our land mass, faces a threat from shipping industry pollution. Sri Lanka lies in a strategic position for many marine routes and the EEZ environmen­t is severely threatened by ship oil spills, solid waste and chemicals dumped in the sea.

Reassuring­ly, MEPA said this problem had been brought under control to a certain extent as strict global regulation­s are in place when ships travel through internatio­nal waters.

An oil leak was reported in September last year when an oil tanker was unloading fur-

During the survey, which covered one season of the year, microplast­ic particles were found throughout the survey area on all sampling stations. The highest concentrat­ions were found in the north-western region of Sri Lanka’s territoria­l waters.

nace oil about six nautical miles off the Muthurajaw­ela coast. The extent of the oil leak and environmen­tal damage to the marine eco-system are yet to be ascertaine­d.

The Coast Conservati­on and Coastal Resource Management Department, a state agency tasked with the mandate of protecting sustainabl­e coastal resources, is working hard on beach-cleaning initiative­s and awareness campaigns for fisherfolk.

MEPA’s Dr. Kumara said his department lacks the legal powers to punish marine polluters but plans are underway to toughen the Marine Pollution Environmen­t Act No. 35 of 2008 before end of this year with fines and other stringent measures.

 ??  ?? From paradise isle to plastic isle: These pictures along the Mattakkuli­ya beach capture the gravity of the issue.Pix by Sameera Weeraseker­a
From paradise isle to plastic isle: These pictures along the Mattakkuli­ya beach capture the gravity of the issue.Pix by Sameera Weeraseker­a
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