"Plastic soup" sea pollution highlighted by Anna Rosbach

Published: 19 March 2010 y., Friday

Nafta jūroje
Imagine a drifting mass of plastic and rubber 34 times the size of the Netherlands. In fact, it already exists in the Pacific Ocean and a recent Parliamentary report by Danish MEP Anna Rosbach (EFD) has thrown light on this disturbing and growing problem. On 11 March MEPs backed her report fighting pollution in the North East Atlantic. When she spoke to us she drew attention to the risks of the "plastic soup" phenomenon and the threats to the Baltic Sea region.

We began by asking why these issues are important to her.

You know, for me, water is the most important thing. Without water, there would be no life on earth. And if we pollute the water too much, we'll have serious problems.

Can you explain this "plastic soup"?

A huge amount of plastic soup is actually wearing Chinese and Japanese signs and letters. Unfortunately, a lot of these things come from Europe as well. We have plastic soup in the Atlantic Ocean, and we have plastic soup in the Pacific. It is growing extremely fast and deepening - the layers are getting thicker and thicker.

How big is it?

You cannot say it is one huge continent - they form islands and in the places they are found they are getting bigger.

You should start a new kind of industry retrieving the plastic! You cannot just take a normal fishing boat and say: "OK, I'll trawl around and just do some harvesting". This is because the plastic bottle for drinking water is made out of a totally different kind of plastic than a can of oil or the kind you have in your household.

It's a problem to be aware of and it is an industry and something you can make a living out of as a private person. The next step is to find supply companies who are able to turn this into a new beginning.

Presumably, this is also damaging fish?

It is - and ocean mammals, small whales, a lot of animals are actually drowning! And they say that even sharks are drowning because if a shark is stuck in a fishing net, for instance, it can't move. And if sharks cannot move, they cannot breathe.

It is insane that you find seals and dolphins and those kinds of animals with plastic toys inside them. It's very sad actually.

Are countries like China and the US aware of the problem?

I don't know the expression in English - something like "out of sight of mind".

And what about old fishing nets?

I heard about a Danish fisherman who was very annoyed about all the nets that he had left-over and didn't really know where to put them. He found a way to have them ripped up in tiny pieces so that they could be reused. They will be turned into new nets. And he patented it and started a huge industry - within a year he was a millionaire!

In our conversation Ms Rosbach also mentioned a report she is currently drafting on pollution in the Baltic.

Regarding pollution, if there is an agreement between Sweden and Finland and Denmark, you still have rivers running through Belarus and Russia directly into the Baltic Sea - and this area is so sensitive. It is an area where it's nearly impossible not to bring pollution into it. And you have the Finnish paper industry, which has been going on for more than 100 years. To make paper you need quite a lot of chemicals. It's the same in Sweden.

We asked her whether people should take responsibility.

If you start to be responsible yourself in your own family, that makes it so much easier than for a whole country. I think it's up to the one ship owner to say: "No, I'm not emptying my tank and cleaning it out in open sea because that will pollute the beaches where I, my wife and my children like to swim".

Anna Rosbach is a Member of the Parliament's Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety. Her report is entitled: "Recommendation on the proposal for a Council decision concerning the conclusion, on behalf of the European Community, of the Additional Protocol to the Cooperation Agreement for the Protection of the Coasts and Waters of the North-East Atlantic against Pollution".

 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

EU-China Summit in Prague – facing global challenges together

The 11 th EU-China Summit will take place in Prague on 20 May 2009. more »

In Africa, 'Poverty Has a Female Face'

The global economic crisis will drastically reduce African women’s individual incomes as well as the budgets they manage on behalf of their households, with particularly damaging consequences for girls. more »

Statement at the Conclusion of an IMF Staff Visit to Estonia

A team from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), led by Mr. Christoph Rosenberg, visited Tallinn May 12-18 to review with the authorities the economic situation and assess policies. more »

India may be forced to buy water

Dozens of residents of the city of Agra gather to collect water. The city known as 'Monument of Love', in India's northern Uttar Pradesh state is experiencing a shortage of drinking water because of rising levels of mercury. more »

European Commissioner Louis Michel awarded African Peace Prize

This is the first edition of the prize, which will be awarded every year to three personalities and/or institutions – two from Africa and one from abroad – recognized for their achievements in the fields of peace promotion in Africa and global solidarity. more »

Commission allocates 54 million euros to address major humanitarian needs in five countries

With five new financial decisions, the European Commission is providing a total of €54 million in humanitarian aid to vulnerable people in Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya and Uganda. more »

Czech Minister of Finance Eduard Janota spoke at the Brussels Economic Forum

President of the ECOFIN Council and Czech Minister of Finance Eduard Janota spoke today at the Brussels Economic Forum on “population ageing, the economic crisis, and their impact on the sustainability of public finances”. more »

Hopes for new stability in India

The overwhelming election victory by Prime MInister Manmohan Singh's ruling coalition boosts hopes of a stable government in India. more »

Tornadoes pound U.S. heartland

Mother nature gave the U.S. heartland a beating -- in the form of several strong tornadoes that ripped through the Midwest -- killing at least three people. more »

NATO depot hit in Pakistan

Militants attacked a NATO supply unit in Peshawar during the night as fighting along the Afghan-Pakistan border rose. more »