What MH370 told us - the
oceans are awash with trash
Paul Mobbs
5th April
2014 /
In the search for Malaysia
Airlines flight MH370 we have found oil slicks and debris everywhere - none of
it connected to the missing plane, writes Paul Mobbs. The seas are littered
with human trash, and it's killing the oceanic ecosystem.
The currents of the Indian Ocean Gyre
Over recent weeks the news has been
dominated by the story of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370[1].
The plane, with 227 passengers and 12 crew
on board, lost contact with ground radar on the 8th March - and no trace of it
has been found since.
A few days later, I was asked to write an
article on how a plane could simply 'disappear'. As the article outlined [2],
it's not that difficult to lose a plane at sea.
However, in the few weeks since my
attention has been drawn to a far more significant aspect of the story; one
which has not been headline news.
From the outset of the rescue operation
there were reports of oil slicks and drifting debris spotted in the South China Sea . When the focus shifted to first the
northern, then southern, and then back to the middle of the Indian
Ocean , yet more debris was spotted.
Satellite photos [3] (see photo, right)
from different nations were strewn across news casts show objects floating in
the water. Spotter planes also reported seeing collections of floating debris.
The trash is everywhere
Since the plane's loss we've had almost
daily reports of possible debris. Despite hopes being raised each time a large
patch of debris was found [4], on investigation none of this debris found had
any link to the missing plane.
Almost a month later, the most significant
untold story of the search for Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 is that our
oceans are full of trash!
That trash comes in all shapes and sizes
[5], and, for the first time, the amount of trash out there is hampering all
efforts to try and find the possible location of the plane.
The large chunks spotted by satellite and
search plane - a few metres across - represent the smallest fraction of the sum
of human waste dumped in the oceans.
What the rescue services have seen is just
the waste which floats - a lot also sinks to the bottom [6]. In fact, the bulk
of the human waste in the oceans is made up of particles only a millimetre or
two across [7].
There is now more waste than plankton - by
6:1
The problem is that the oceans are very big
- and so it's easy to hide an awful lot of human wastes out there. However,
some recent studies have shown that the amount of waste in the water column now
outweighs the plankton by up to six-to-one [8].
In places the debris is so dense that we
see reef fish, usually only found on the coastal fringe, living within the
debris in the middle of the open oceans[9].
Drifting waste is concentrated by winds,
waves and ocean currents. You may have heard of the 'Great Pacific Garbage
Patch' [10] in the middle of the Pacific. There are in fact five ocean gyres
which now concentrate human waste.
One of them, the Indian Ocean Gyre [11],
covers the area to the west of Australia
where the search effort for flight MH370 is now centred. That's what's making
the search for the plane so difficult - there's an awful lot of garbage
drifting around just there.
The rise is inexorable
Learned articles[12] have been written
about the problems of waste in the oceans for some time. The eco-concerns of
the 1970s led to the adoption of the London Dumping Convention[13] - and yet,
despite many campaigns[14], this seems to have had little impact on the
inexorable rise of the volumes of waste now entering the world's ocean systems.
This material is poisoning the oceans [15].
As one recent study states [16],
"The longevity of plastic is estimated
to be hundreds to thousands of years, but is likely to be far longer in deep
sea and non-surface polar environments.
"Plastic debris poses considerable
threat by choking and starving wildlife, distributing non-native and
potentially harmful organisms, absorbing toxic chemicals and degrading to
micro-plastics that may subsequently be ingested."
MH370 was a tragedy. The state of our
oceans is a catastrophe
We know [17] that plastics are now
disruptively re-engineering [18] marine ecology, harming ocean life [19], and
that this ultimately threatens the human food supply [20].
The difficulty is that solving this problem
is centred on that multi-faceted phenomenon which is at the root of so many
ecological issues - the throwaway consumer society.
The loss of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370
is a human tragedy. But the factors which are today exacerbating the search for
the plane mark an even greater human tragedy in the future.
One which, as recent coverage of the rescue
operations shows, we are myopically incapable of recognising as a greater
danger to us all.
Paul Mobbs is an independent environmental
consultant, investigator, author and lecturer. He runs the Free Range Activism
website.
References:
Guardian On-line: 'Malaysia Airlines flight
MH370' - http://www.theguardian.com/world/malaysia-airlines-flight-mh370
Speed may shrink the time, but we still
live in a very big world - the physical realities of the search for Malaysia
Airlines flight MH370, Paul Mobbs, Mobbs' Environmental Investigations, Tuesday
11th March 2014
-http://www.fraw.org.uk/mei/musings/2014/20140403-malaysia_airlines_flight_mh370.html
French and Chinese satellite images show
'potential objects', Paul Farrell, Guardian On-line Sunday 23rd March 2014 -
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/23/mh370-poor-visibility-indian-ocean-search-effort
MH370: 122 objects spotted in Indian Ocean are 'most credible lead yet', Tania
Branigan, The Guardian, Wednesday 26 th March 2014 -
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/26/mh370-objects-indian-ocean-credible-lead
Wikipedia: 'Marine debris' -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_debris
Our deep sea garbage dump: 18,000 hours of
footage shows Pacific seafloor heaped in man-made trash, Daily Mail, 26th June
2013 - http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2349062/Our-deep-sea-garbage-dump-18-000-hours-footage-shows-Pacific-seafloor-heaped-man-trash.html
Scales of Spatial Heterogeneity of Plastic
Marine Debris in the Northeast Pacific Ocean, Miriam C. Goldstein, Andrew J.
Titmus, Michael Ford, Plos One, 20th November 2013
-http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0080020
Density of Plastic Particles found in
zooplankton trawls from Coastal Waters of California to the North Pacific
Central Gyre, C.J. Moore, G.L. Lattin, A.F. Zellers, Algalita Marine Research
Foundation, 2008
-http://www.algalita.org/pdf/Density%20of%20Particles%20spellchkd11-05.pdf
TED: 'The Great Pacific Garbage Patch',
November 2010 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXKpqHtkmHw
Wikipedia: 'Great Pacific garbage patch' -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Pacific_garbage_patch
Wikipedia: 'Indian Ocean Gyre' -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_Ocean_Gyre
The pollution of the marine environment by
plastic debris: a review, José G.B. Derraik, Marine Pollution Bulletin, vol.44
pp.842-852, 2002 - http://www.caseinlet.org/uploads/Moore--Derraik_1_.pdf
Wikipedia: 'London Convention on the
Prevention of Marine Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and Other Matter'
-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Convention_on_the_Prevention_of_Marine_Pollution_by_Dumping_of_Wastes_and_Other_Matter
Plastic Debris in the World's Oceans,
Michelle Allsopp, Adam Walters, David Santillo, and Paul Johnston, Greenpeace
International, 2006 -http://www.unep.org/regionalseas/marinelitter/publications/docs/plastic_ocean_report.pdf
Synthetic polymers in the marine
environment: A rapidly increasing, long-term threat, Charles James Moore.,
Environmental Research, vol.108 pp.131-139, 2008 -
http://www.algalita.org/pdf/YENRS5200.pdf
Accumulation and fragmentation of plastic
debris in global environments, David K. A. Barnes, Francois Galgani, Richard C.
Thompson and Morton Barlaz, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B,
vol.364 pp.1985-1998, 2009 - http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/364/1526/1985.full
Microplastic ingestion decreases energy
reserves in marine worms, Stephanie L. Wright, Darren Rowe, Richard C.
Thompson, Tamara S. Galloway, Current Biology, vol.23 no.23 pp.R1031-R1033, 2nd
December 2013 - http://www.cell.com/current-biology/abstract/S0960-9822%2813%2901343-2
Microplastics make marine worms sick,
Physorg, 2nd December 2013 -
http://phys.org/news/2013-12-microplastics-marine-worms-sick.html
Mounting microplastic pollution harms
'earthworms of the sea' - report, Jessica Aldred, Guardian On-line, Monday 2nd
December 2013 -
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/dec/02/microplastic-pollution-harms-lugworms-sea-oceans
Microplastics in the aquatic food chain:
Sources, measurement, occurrence and potential health risks, P.C.H. Hollman, H.
Bouwmeester and R.J.B. Peters, RIKILT Wageningen University Research/Dutch
Ministry of Economic Affairs, June 2013 - http://edepot.wur.nl/260490
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