Bangkok Post

Researcher­s plan major ocean microplast­ics survey

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TOKYO: Scientists will begin a two-year survey of microplast­ics in the coastal waters off Japan from April, a research group announced yesterday, with concern growing about the impact of plastics on the oceans.

The survey, which is being organised by Japanese scientists and the Tara Ocean Foundation, will be conducted by several marine research facilities located across Japan, from the northern island of Hokkaido to southweste­rn Kyushu.

Researcher­s will collect samples for analysis of microplast­ics and measure their impact on marine life, as well as work to raise awareness locally about the issue.

The Tara Ocean Foundation last year produced an unpreceden­ted study of plastic pollution in European rivers, finding 100% of its samples contained plastic and microplast­ics.

“These rather alarming findings led us to prepare a project here in Japan,” the group’s executive director Romain

Trouble said at a press conference in Tokyo.

The goal, he said, would not be to point the finger at a particular region.

“We’re trying to find out what this plastic pollution is and where it comes from, so public funding goes to the right place to stop plastic pollution,” he said.

The project will also be a chance to talk to local communitie­s, including the fishing industry, schoolchil­dren and municipali­ties, and discuss the role that each can play in consuming, sorting and recycling.

The group’s flagship vessel Tara has been to Japan before, for a 2017 survey of coral in the Pacific Ocean, but will not be involved in the new project.

Instead, the research will rely on the Japanese Associatio­n for Marine Biology network, which has more than 20 coastal facilities equipped with research infrastruc­ture.

“It is really very important to have figures which allow the developmen­t of strategies to limit this pollution but also to create models that illustrate the flow of plastic,” said Sylvain Agostini, a researcher at Tsukuba University, who will be part of the project.

Some eight million tonnes of plastics enter the world’s oceans every year, and the issue has gained increasing attention in Japan.

The government has pledged to reduce the country’s annual 9.4 million tonnes of plastic waste by 25% by 2030, and will ban free plastic bags in supermarke­ts later this year.

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