a garbage
tip that stretches from Hawaii to Japan
Source: www.independent.co.uk
By Kathy Marks, Asia-Pacific Correspondent, and Daniel Howden
Tuesday,
5 February 2008
A "plastic soup" of waste floating in the Pacific
Ocean is growing at an alarming rate and now covers an area twice
the size of the continental United States, scientists have said.
The vast expanse of debris – in effect the world's largest rubbish
dump – is held in place by swirling underwater currents. This
drifting "soup" stretches from about 500 nautical miles
off the Californian coast, across the northern Pacific, past
Hawaii and almost as far as Japan.
Charles Moore, an American oceanographer who discovered the "Great
Pacific Garbage Patch" or "trash vortex", believes
that about 100 million tons of flotsam are circulating in the
region. Marcus Eriksen, a research director of the US-based Algalita
Marine Research Foundation, which Mr Moore founded, said yesterday: "The
original idea that people had was that it was an island of plastic
garbage that you could almost walk on. It is not quite like that.
It is almost like a plastic soup. It is endless for an area that
is maybe twice the size as continental United States."
Curtis Ebbesmeyer, an oceanographer and leading authority on
flotsam, has tracked the build-up of plastics in the seas for
more than 15 years and compares the trash vortex to a living
entity: "It moves around like a big animal without a leash." When
that animal comes close to land, as it does at the Hawaiian archipelago,
the results are dramatic. "The garbage patch barfs, and
you get a beach covered with this confetti of plastic," he
added.
The "soup" is actually two linked areas, either side
of the islands of Hawaii, known as the Western and Eastern Pacific
Garbage Patches. About one-fifth of the junk – which includes
everything from footballs and kayaks to Lego blocks and carrier
bags – is thrown off ships or oil platforms. The rest comes from
land.
Mr Moore, a former sailor, came across the sea of waste by chance
in 1997, while taking a short cut home from a Los Angeles to
Hawaii yacht race. He had steered his craft into the "North
Pacific gyre" – a vortex where the ocean circulates slowly
because of little wind and extreme high pressure systems. Usually
sailors avoid it.
He was astonished to find himself surrounded by rubbish, day
after day, thousands of miles from land. "Every time I came
on deck, there was trash floating by," he said in an interview. "How
could we have fouled such a huge area? How could this go on for
a week?"
Mr Moore, the heir to a family fortune from the oil industry,
subsequently sold his business interests and became an environmental
activist. He warned yesterday that unless consumers cut back
on their use of disposable plastics, the plastic stew would double
in size over the next decade.
Professor David Karl, an oceanographer at the University of
Hawaii, said more research was needed to establish the size and
nature of the plastic soup but that there was "no reason
to doubt" Algalita's findings.
"After all, the plastic trash is going somewhere and it
is about time we get a full accounting of the distribution of
plastic in the marine ecosystem and especially its fate and impact
on marine ecosystems."
Professor Karl is co-ordinating an expedition with Algalita
in search of the garbage patch later this year and believes the
expanse of junk actually represents a new habitat. Historically,
rubbish that ends up in oceanic gyres has biodegraded. But modern
plastics are so durable that objects half-a-century old have
been found in the north Pacific dump. "Every little piece
of plastic manufactured in the past 50 years that made it into
the ocean is still out there somewhere," said Tony Andrady,
a chemist with the US-based Research Triangle Institute.
Mr Moore said that because the sea of rubbish is translucent
and lies just below the water's surface, it is not detectable
in satellite photographs. "You only see it from the bows
of ships," he said.
According to the UN Environment Programme, plastic debris causes
the deaths of more than a million seabirds every year, as well
as more than 100,000 marine mammals. Syringes, cigarette lighters
and toothbrushes have been found inside the stomachs of dead
seabirds, which mistake them for food.
Plastic is believed to constitute 90 per cent of all rubbish
floating in the oceans. The UN Environment Programme estimated
in 2006 that every square mile of ocean contains 46,000 pieces
of floating plastic,
Dr Eriksen said the slowly rotating mass of rubbish-laden water
poses a risk to human health, too. Hundreds of millions of tiny
plastic pellets, or nurdles – the raw materials for the plastic
industry – are lost or spilled every year, working their way
into the sea. These pollutants act as chemical sponges attracting
man-made chemicals such as hydrocarbons and the pesticide DDT.
They then enter the food chain. "What goes into the ocean
goes into these animals and onto your dinner plate. It's that
simple," said Dr Eriksen. |