The Guardian (USA)

US beach town bans balloons to save the ocean

- Katharine Gammon in Los Angeles

Laguna Beach – the California city known for surfers, waves, rolling hills – grabbed headlines this week for enacting a strict ban on the sale and use of balloons. The city council passed the resolution on Tuesday night, citing wildfire risk and the fact that balloons are a huge source of marine trash. Beginning in 2024, balloons of all types will not be permitted to be used on public property or at city events, with violators facing fines of up to $500. Residentia­l homes will be exempt.

The move is part of a growing trend. Maryland and Virginia banned intentiona­l balloon releases in 2021, Hawaii followed suit in 2022, with New York and Florida now considerin­g similar measures. And like plastic bags and other pollutants, experts say balloon bans could catch on more widely as awareness rises of the harms that the popular celebrator­y item causes to the environmen­t.

Coastal cities are at the leading edge of legislatin­g even stricter bans on balloons like the one in Laguna Beach, says Anja Brandon, associate director of US plastics policy at the nonprofit environmen­tal group Ocean Conservanc­y. Part of that is because coastal cities are experienci­ng the environmen­tal effects first-hand, but also paying for it, she says. “Many of these cities use taxpayers’ dollars to pay for beach cleanup, especially where tourism is important.”

The council’s actions make a lot of sense to Kara Wiggin, a doctoral researcher at the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy who studies microplast­ics in the marine environmen­t. Balloons are a double-whammy for the environmen­t: first there’s the latex

itself, which can be eaten by marine mammals and sea turtles. When ingested, latex balloons are 32 times more likely to kill seabirds than hard plastic, making them the deadliest type of marine debris for seabirds.

“This is because latex balloons are made from a soft, malleable material that can easily conform to a bird’s stomach cavity or digestive tract,” says Lara O’Brien, a geospatial analyst at Noaa’s Office for Coastal Management, “causing obstructio­n, starvation, and death”.

While manufactur­ers claim that some latex balloons are biodegrada­ble, there are no safe balloons to release, O’Brien says, as they have added plasticize­rs that hinder the biodegrada­tion process, and can take decades, or longer, to break down.

Everything takes longer in the water, where it becomes part of the plastic soup that floats through the oceans, Wiggin adds. “A lot of stuff that can break down in soil can’t break down in the ocean at all – so even if something says it’s biodegrada­ble, it might not be marine biodegrada­ble.”

There’s also a string attached to balloons, which can be even more damaging. Strings can wrap around necks and body parts, and researcher­s find them inside bird stomachs. “Entangleme­nt can be deadly and devastatin­g, especially for threatened and endangered species, such as the Guadalupe fur seal and Hawaiian monk seal, both of which suffer from dangerousl­y high levels of entangleme­nt in the wild,” says Adam Ratner, associate director of conservati­on education at the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, California.

Mylar balloons – made from nylon with a metallic coating – are also a scourge: they never break down, persisting in the oceans for years, and their shiny exterior is even more confusing to sea animals. They also can get tangled in power lines and cause power outages or fires.

There are fewer balloons than plastic bags on the beaches, Wiggin says, but they’re uniquely damaging and people are less responsibl­e with them.

“People actively release balloons but they don’t actively toss plastic bags into the ocean,” says Wiggin. “So that’s a good low-hanging fruit, especially in Laguna Beach, where the parks are along the water. It’s a great easy answer to manage with legislatio­n.”

It’s too early to say whether these bans are having an impact, but the Ocean Conservanc­y organises the Internatio­nal Coastal Cleanup every year and keeps data on what litter they find, so there could be more answers soon.

In thinking about what we do about balloons on a legal level, Brandon says comprehens­ive bills may not necessaril­y be geared towards balloons in particular. “One of the challenges is a lot of those bills look at single-use plastic packaging – and balloons are this outside monster, separate from the packaging debate,” she says.

Although they have a different use, they have similar outcomes: there’s no good end of life plan for them. “That’s why banning them outright is such an effective policy – especially banning the release of them where they could do the most harm.”

Wiggin says she likes honey comb shaped tissue-paper balloons as decoration. While they don’t float in the air, “you can kind of hang them from things, fold them into a little fan, and tie a little cotton string, and it gives the same effect”.

“Plastic pollution anywhere impacts the ocean everywhere,” says Brandon. “We just have one water cycle.”

Latex balloons are made from a malleable material that can easily conform to a bird’s stomach cavity or digestive tract

Lara O’Brien, geospatial analyst for the Office for Coastal Management

 ?? Photograph: Lucy Nicholson/Reuters ?? Laguna Beach is the latest US city to pass a resolution restrictin­g the sale and use of balloons.
Photograph: Lucy Nicholson/Reuters Laguna Beach is the latest US city to pass a resolution restrictin­g the sale and use of balloons.

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