Pollution of the oceans
6
WOR 7 The Ocean, Guarantor of Life – Sustainable Use, Effective Protection | 2021

Pollution of the oceans

Pollution of the oceans
> Whether deliberately discharged or unintentionally introduced, plastic waste, pharmaceuticals, toxic heavy metals, insecticides and other chemicals have found their way to every corner of the oceans. The consequences are catastrophic and often lethal, especially for marine organisms. The only good news is that international prohibitions of some pollutants are beginning to have an effect. Without radical changes in industry and commerce, however, the pollution crisis in the oceans cannot be overcome.
A problem of immense scale - fig. 6.3 Eduardo Leal

A problem of immense scale

> The United Nations has estimated that humankind discharges around 400 million tonnes of pollutants into the sea annually. Evidence of this persistent pollution can now be found in all regions of the world‘s oceans – on remote islands, in the polar regions and in the deepest ocean trenches. Substances that are concentrated in the food chain are especially harmful because these pose a real danger to marine organisms as well as to people.

more >

Seas brimming with litter and pollutants

Not only does the world ocean play a major role in the climate and species-diversity crises of the Earth. It is also affected by a third global environmental crisis: the widespread pollution of terrestrial and marine ­areas. Every year as much as 400 million tonnes of pollutants end up in lakes and rivers, and ultimately in the seas. These include thousands of different chemicals, nutrients, plastics and other synthetic products, toxic heavy metals, pharmaceuticals, cosmetic products, pathogens, radioactive substances and much more.
In eight of ten cases, pollutants identified in the sea originate from terrestrial sources. As industrial or household waste, they are either discharged directly into the water, escape from poorly functioning wastewater treatment plants, are washed from the fields and streets by rainfall from above, or are leached from landfills and garbage dumps into subterranean water channels or streams. Litter and plastics are also ­carried to the sea by the wind. The remaining input of pollu­tion occurs directly at sea, as a result of fishing and aquaculture or from shipping.
Winds and ocean currents transport garbage and pollutants to the most inaccessible regions of the world’s oceans. Evidence of the pollution can be found on remote islands, in the polar sea ice and in deep ­ocean trenches. Pollutants especially hazardous for marine biotic communities are those that are long-lived and that accumulate in the food webs. These are characteristic, for example, of the group of persistent organic pollutants (POPs), which includes many pesticides and industrial chemicals.
The consequences of contamination are manifold and are distinguished according to the species affected and pollutant concerned. Known environmental pollutants cause diseases such as cancer, evoke deformities and behavioural changes in marine organisms, impair reproduction in affected species and can cause death in contaminated individuals. As a rule, predators at the highest trophic levels are especially impacted by environmental pollutants. These include sharks, toothed whales and seals. Animals that come into contact with plastic waste are in danger of being trapped, or of ingesting the plastic and starving with a full stomach. At least 700 animal species have now been identified for which plastic in the ocean can be a deadly hazard.
The international community is attempting to limit the input of pollutants into the seas through a variety of international agreements as well as trans-regional and national regulations. The prohibition of selected persistent organic pollutants by the Stockholm Convention, for example, is delivering results. The concentrations of these pollutants in the sea are declining.
But in many other cases, politicians and scientists are facing the problem that regulatory authorities are not always fully informed about the chemicals that are used in popular products, or about the impacts ­these ingredients would have should they someday end up in the sea. In many cases, the risk analyses required for a ban on dangerous substances are only possible after excessive quantities of them have already been introduced into the ocean and researchers are able to demonstrate the links between pollutant input and ecosystem destruction.
An end to the crisis of marine pollution will not be possible until a large proportion of the households and businesses around the world are connected to func­tioning sewage and solid-waste management systems, until substances toxic to the environment and carbon-based plastics are replaced by biodegradable alter­natives, and the use of chemicals and plastics is ­limited to closed-loop systems.