The Guardian (USA)

Call for urgent overhaul of Australia’s monitoring of ‘astronomic­al’ plastic pollution

- Henry Belot

The Australian Academy of Science has called for an overhaul of the nation’s approach to studying plastic pollution, warning there is an over-reliance on volunteers and a lack of consistent data to document the “astronomic­al” problem.

About three-quarters of rubbish along Australia’s coast is plastic, posing a threat to more than 690 marine animals including turtles and seabirds. CSIRO researcher­s believe 43% of shorttaile­d shearwater birds in eastern Australia have plastic in their gut.

There have been major surveys of plastic pollution on beaches, including the Australian Marine Debris Initiative and the CSIRO’s internatio­nal research partnershi­p. But the academy is calling for more regular surveys that have a consistent approach and are collated in a national plastic pollution database.

“To stop pollution effectivel­y you need to know its source, and knowing what leaks into the environmen­t and its origins is critical for that,” said Prof

Chennupati Jagadish, the president of the Australian Academy of Science.

“Just as we have national monitoring systems for emissions, outdoor air quality, and wastewater for drugs or Covid, it should be possible to identify some points to measure the amount of plastics entering our waterways to get a more complete and regular picture.”

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Most marine debris surveys are heavily reliant on citizen scientists.

A CSIRO plastic pollution survey was assisted by 3,500 volunteers while a University of New South Wales-led project called on 150,000 volunteers. The National Litter Index and AusMap are also reliant on citizen scientists.

“Citizen science is valuable and we are glad for the above initiative­s,” Chennupati said. “However, better data arrangemen­ts are required that would allow for standard methodolog­y, collection and harmonisat­ion.

“They would also add more resilience, meaning we’re not reliant upon the goodwill and the consistent availabili­ty of volunteers.”

Colleen Hughson, the co-leader of BeachPatro­l 3280-3284, a volunteer group that cleans beaches between Warrnamboo­l and Port Fairy on Victoria’s western coast, has spent years maintainin­g a database of plastic pollution. Hughson and her team have collected almost half a million items of plastic and marine debris, weighing a total 6.5 tonnes. This includes 321,000 pieces of hard plastic, 20,000 bottle lids, 40,000 fishing ropes in nets. The group have also collected foreign-labelled drink bottles, spray cans, plastic forks, fluorescen­t light tubes and cigarette tins.

Hughson said she was frustrated that years of data collected by her group hadn’t fed into national studies of plastic pollution and marine debris. Any national database should build on the hard work of volunteers, she said, not replace it.

“We have a good system, we go to the same beaches each day, we document how much time we spent there, how long we walked for, how many kilograms [of marine debris] we found, how many items we found, what the items were,” Hughson said.

“Who do we show our data to? Who is going to do something? No one. And that’s one of the big issues that we find. We don’t want to be volunteers doing the work, we actually want to see results.”

Hughson said a lot of the existing data reflected what was being washed into urban waterways, as that is where many volunteers live.

“We have these amazing ocean beaches that are not impacted by human littering as not many people visit them, so we’re seeing what’s being washed ashore,” Hughson said. “We’re getting lost commercial fishing gear and internatio­nal shipping rubbish.

“The consistenc­y of going back to the beach every day, or every second day, gives you a really strong sense of what the problem plastics are.”

 ?? ?? Plastic and marine debris found by volunteers from BeachPatro­l 3280-3284, which collects rubbish from Warrnamboo­l to Port Fairy on Victoria's west coast. Photograph: Colleen Hughson
Plastic and marine debris found by volunteers from BeachPatro­l 3280-3284, which collects rubbish from Warrnamboo­l to Port Fairy on Victoria's west coast. Photograph: Colleen Hughson

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