Monday, January 13, 2014

The plastisphere menace

Source : The Star 13/1/14

BY LOUIS SAHAGUN

A new world: Plastic debris in the ocean has spawned a ‘plastisphere’ of organisms that scientists fear may send ripples through the marine ecosystem.
A new world: Plastic debris in the ocean has spawned a ‘plastisphere’ of organisms that scientists fear may send ripples through the marine ecosystem.
   
An ecosystem of mankind’s own making could pose an ecological threat.
ELIZABETH Lopez manoeuvred a massive steel claw over the side of a 45m sailboat and guided its descent through swaying kelp and schools of fish 16km off the coast of San Diego, California. She was hoping to catch pieces of a mysterious marine ecosystem that scientists are calling the “plastisphere”.
It starts with particles of degraded plastic no bigger than grains of salt. Bacteria take up residence on those tiny pieces of trash. Then single-celled animals feed on the bacteria, and larger predators feed on them.
“We’ve created a new man-made ecosystem of plastic debris,” said Lopez, a graduate student at the University of San Diego, during the recent expedition.
The plastisphere was six decades in the making. It’s a product of the discarded plastic – shopping bags, flipflops, margarine tubs, toys, toothbrushes – that gets swept from urban sewer systems and river channels into the sea.
Degraded plastic bags that have been washed ashore in Sekincan, Selangor. A new man-made ecosystem of plastic debris is taking shape in the sea.
Degraded plastic bags that have washed ashore in Sekincan, Selangor. A new man-made ecosystem of plastic debris is taking shape in the sea.

When that debris washes into the ocean, it breaks down into bits that are colonised by microscopic organisms that scientists are just beginning to understand. Researchers suspect that some of the denizens may be pathogens hitching long-distance rides on floating junk. Scientists also fear that creatures in the plastisphere break down chunks of polyethylene and polypropylene so completely that dangerous chemicals percolate into the environment.
“This is an issue of great concern,” said Tracy Mincer, a marine geochemist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts. “Microbes may be greatly accelerating the weathering of plastic debris into finer bits. If so, we aren’t sure how zooplankton and other small creatures are responding to that, or whether harmful additives, pigments, plasticisers, flame retardants and other toxic compounds are leaching into the water.”
Planet Plastic
About 245 million tonnes of plastic is produced annually around the world, according to industry estimates. That represents 31.5kg of plastic annually for each of the 7.1 billion people on the planet, scientists say.
The waste gathers in vast oval-shaped ocean “garbage patches” formed by converging currents and winds. Once trapped in these cyclonic dead zones, plastic particles may persist for centuries. The physiological effects of visible plastic debris on the fish, birds, turtles and marine mammals that ingest it are well-documented: clogged intestines, suffocation, loss of vital nutrients, starvation. The effects of the minuscule pieces that make up the plastisphere are only beginning to be understood.
Edward Carpenter, a professor of microbial ecology at San Francisco State University, first reported that microbes could attach themselves to plastic particles adrift at sea in 1972. He observed that these particles enabled the growth of algae and probably bacteria and speculated that hazardous chemicals showing up in ocean animals may have leached out of bits of plastic.
Carpenter’s discovery went largely unnoticed for decades. But now, the scientific effort to understand how the plastisphere influences the ocean environment has become a vibrant and growing field of study. From Woods Hole to the University of Hawaii, scientists are collecting seawater and marine life so they can analyse the types, sizes and chemical compositions of the plastic fragments they contain. Their findings are shedding new light on the ramifications of humanity’s addiction to plastic.
A fine mesh net called a ¿neuston net¿ collects samples of animal and plant life at the sea surface as it is towed,
A fine mesh net called a neuston net collects samples of animal and plant life at the sea surface as it is towed.

“We’re changing the basic rhythms of life in the world’s oceans, and we need to understand the consequences of that,” said marine biologist Miriam Goldstein, who earned her doctorate at University of California San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography by studying plastic debris in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch between Hawaii and California.
In October, Goldstein and oceanographer Deb Goodwin of the Sea Education Association in Woods Hole reported that one-third of the gooseneck barnacles they collected from the garbage patch had plastic particles in their guts. The typical fragment measured 1.4mm across, not much bigger than a piece of glitter, according to their report in the journal PeerJ.
Some of the barnacles had bits of plastic in their faecal pellets too. That finding led Goldstein to speculate that some of the 256 barnacles that were plastic-free when they were captured by researchers had probably eaten plastic at some point in their lives but cleared it from their systems. Since crabs prey on barnacles, the plastic the barnacles eat may be spreading through the food web, Goldstein and Goodwin reported.
Fish that ingest plastic debris tend to accumulate hazardous substances in their bodies and suffer from liver toxicity, according to a study published in the journalScientific Reports. Not only was the plastic itself dangerous, so too were the toxic chemicals the plastic had absorbed.
The plastisphere isn’t limited to oceans. In 2012, a team of researchers discovered microplastic pollution in the Great Lakes – including high volumes of polyethylene and polypropylene “microbeads” used in facial cleansers.
Other scientists, including Mincer of the Woods Hole institution and microbial ecologist Erik Zettler of the Sea Education Association, spent three years coming up with the first comprehensive description of microbial communities that colonise plastic marine debris.
The researchers used fine-scale nets to skim plastic particles from more than 100 locations in the Atlantic Ocean, from Massachusetts to the Caribbean Sea. Using scanning electron microscopes and gene-sequencing techniques, they identified more than 1,000 different types of bacteria and algae attached to seaborne plastic, according to their report in June in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.
Of particular concern was a sample of polypropylene not much larger than the head of a pin. Its surface was dominated by members of the genus Vibrio, which includes the bacteria that cause cholera and other gastrointestinal ailments.
In a research on the effects of plastic waste, students from the University of San Diego use tweezers and a spoon to gather specimens of weathered plastic retrieved from the sea.
In a research on the effects of plastic waste, students from the University of San Diego use tweezers and a spoon to gather specimens of weathered plastic retrieved from the sea.
These potential pathogens could travel long distances by attaching themselves to plastic debris that persists in the ocean much longer than biodegradable flotsam like feathers and wood.
The team is now comparing microbial communities on plastic debris collected in the North Pacific and North Atlantic oceans, trying to understand the bacteria that feed on their waste products, and predators that feed on all of them.
“Each one of these plastic bits is a circle of life – one microbe’s waste is another microbe’s dinner,” Mincer said. “We want to know more about how some microbes may be hanging out on plastic trash, just waiting to be eaten by fish so they can get into that environment.”
Meanwhile, in San Diego, Lopez and her colleagues are examining the samples they collected under powerful microscopes and removing tiny bits of plastic for classification and chemical analysis.
Their findings will be shared with the Southern California Coastal Water Research Project, a public research institute that monitors urban pollution.
“These microplastic worlds right under our noses are the next ocean frontier,” said Drew Talley, a marine scientist at the University of San Diego.
“It would be a crime not to investigate the damage they might be doing to the oceans and to humans. – Los Angeles Times/McClatchy Tribube Information Services

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Discard your phones the e-green way

THE year-end holiday and shopping season is also gift-giving time. These are often replacements or upgrades to our electronic gadgets. So, what should we do with our old hand phones and other electronics collecting dust in our drawers? If it still works, pass it to someone who can use it. If not, then recycle. But do you see many recycling bins around?

In my experience, they seem to be hidden in out-of-the-way care centres. While mobile phone companies and telcos in the country do have recycling programmes, I noticed that their bins are not commonplace or the programme is for a limited time only.
In Malaysia, Nokia collects used phones and sends them to a recycling plant in Penang. According to Francis Cheong, senior manager for regional sustainability at Nokia Asia-Pacific: "All phones and accessories sent to our vendor facilities in Penang are recycled with almost 100 per cent of the materials recovered for re-use in other products. None are resold as second hand products."
The plastic casings are segregated at their vendor facilities and then forwarded to a local plastic recycler, which then converts them to plastic pallets ready to be used again in many other products. After removing certain elements, the LCDs are disposed of as "scheduled wastes" to Kualiti Alam for final treatment and disposal.
SIM cards, which contain precious metals, are recycled and base materials recovered together with all printed circuit boards. The precious metals are extracted and then sold to various industries for re-use. For example, gold is sold to jewellers or banks.
All parts of the phones are recycled at the Penang facility except for the batteries which are sent to an e-waste recycling plant in Singapore for recovery of the lithium and cobalt salts. This plant has the only patented lithium ion battery recycling system using hydro technology in this part of the world.
Almost 97 per cent of a hand phone can be recycled for plastic, ferrous metals and lithium among other things. Only its LCD screen is non-recyclable because of its heavy metals content. Find out more about a hand phone's afterlife at http://asia.cnet.com/a-mobile-phones-afterlife-62059584.htm. Recycling used electronics means that they won't end up in landfills.
While old phones and computers can be dismantled to extract the useful metals inside, doing it safely is time-consuming. That's why a lot of e-waste from the United States is exported to Guiyu, China (http://content.time.com/ time/magazine/article/ 0,9171,1870485,00.html) -- a recycling hub where peasants heat circuit boards over coal fires to recover lead, while others use acid to burn off bits of gold. Guiyu also has the highest level of cancer-causing dioxins in the world and elevated rates of miscarriages according to reports from nearby Shantou University.
As consumers, we would be wise to think about what happens to the electronic device we discard before we even consider buying a new one.
So, how do you ensure that your old phone doesn't end up poisoning a kid in China? If it's still in good working condition, hand it down or resell it on the second-hand market. If it's broken, don't put it in the garbage. Find out if your retailer or manufacturer offers free recycling.
Recycling e-waste is vital not only for the environment but for the manufacturing industry as well. It prevents e-waste from ending up in landfills and contaminating the environment with toxic and heavy metals. Recycling also helps reduce the need to create or mine raw materials for new products, which reduces manufacturing costs.
For manufacturers, to pitch electronic products as green or complying with the law isn't enough. Neither is following regulations such as restricting lead and cadmium. Removing all or most substances of high concern rather than a few prohibited ones is. These include chemicals that are potentially harmful to human health or the environment.
It would be ideal if recycle bins for phones are as commonplace as hand phone shops. Even better if manufacturers and telcos offer year-round recycling, take back or trade-up programmes in high traffic areas. Focusing on planned longevity -- rather than planned obsolescence -- of the device will minimise its energy impact. This is the kind of sustainable design we want to see more of.
Rather than shopping for something hot off the manufacturing line this holidays, don't upgrade your old phone (or computer or TV) for a little while longer. It may not be in the generous holiday spirit, but it certainly fits the new e-green one. Our children will thank us for this when they live in a future free from overflowing landfills and incinerators.
Rather than buying the latest smartphone and other gadgets, this holidays, try keeping your old phone for a little while longer. AFP pic


Read more: Discard your phones the e-green way - Columnist - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/opinion/columnist/discard-your-phones-the-e-green-way-1.416430#ixzz2tZF7d9De

Friday, November 15, 2013

Sungai Kundang polluters fined

WORRYING TREND: MPS team catches operators of 3 premises dumping waste into river

RAWANG: THREE premises that had been polluting Sungai Kundang were ordered to be shut down  after a raid by  Selayang Municipal Council (MPS) yesterday.
Situated in the same vicinity as two other premises which had dumped toxic waste and oil into the same river recently, MPS special task force chief Paramasivam Chelliah said the trend was worrying as Sungai Kundang was the main water source for Selangor, Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya residents.
"We issued compounds and notices amounting to RM100,000 to the perpetrators."
MPS president Mohd Azizi Mohd Zain had recently pledged to curb river pollution by inspecting premises under MPS's jurisdiction.
A team of journalists, who joined the raiding party, saw how dirty the premises were.
The first raid was carried out at a pork processing shack that also reared fish.
The owner, known only as Goh, said he skinned and cut up pork to be sold, along with the fish.
He said he fed the fish, reared in cages in the river, with internal organs of pigs.
"The water is clean. If the fish do not finish eating the pig intestines, the leftovers will settle at the bottom.
"Therefore, the top part of the water is clean. How can you say I am polluting the river?"
When leaving the premises, the raiding party was tipped off about a nearby fu chok (dried beancurd) producing shack that had also dumped remnants into the river.
The fu chok, which were being dried on sticks at the premises, emitted a terrible stench.
The raiding team discovered that chemicals used to process the fu chok were flowing into a small stream which led to Sungai Kundang.
The third and final raid revealed that a factory set up to recycle waste materials had dug a special drainage system to enable harmful chemicals to flow into Sungai Kundang.
"We checked the drain. The grass on either side of it was dead. They were brown and dried up.
"We suspect the chemicals are poisonous," said Paramasivam.


Read more: Sungai Kundang polluters fined - General - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/nation/general/sungai-kundang-polluters-fined-1.401367#ixzz2tZ9ZIOq7

Friday, October 25, 2013

Illegal dump site sealed

Source : NST, 25/10/13

By S.K.THANUSHA DEVI AND HALIM SAID | news@nst.com.my 

HEALTH HAZARD: Toxic materials found near Selangor water treatment plant

RAWANG: AN illegal dumping ground has been sealed off by the Selayang Municipal Council (MPS) for allegedly causing toxic waste pollution in Sungai Gong, one of the water sources connected to Selangor's main water treatment plants, in Jalan Rawang here.
The site is a walking distance from the recently sealed factory responsible for polluting the river and that had led to water cuts in the Klang Valley area, affecting about a million residents.
MPS president Mohd Azizi Mohd Zain said the council had received a tip-off from the public on the site three weeks ago and had since sent undercover officers to investigate the situation.
"They have been using this site to illegally bury toxic waste and also dump used tyres and burn them at night.
"We have also seen traces of white, blue and red substances in the river and we are worried the water might be polluted," Azizi said after the raid yesterday.
Residents said they have been suffering from the chemical odour, breathing difficulties and mosquito bites since the illegal dumping ground started operating.
"We have been squatting in this area for some time until someone bought the land and allowed us to stay on with minimal rent. So when all this trouble started, we only complained to him but we couldn't go to the authorities as we would be evicted," said a resident.
Azizi, who ordered the site to be sealed permanently, said the area would be locked and the equipment seized. "My three officers who were here to investigate have suffered fever and other skin complications.
"I just cannot imagine how workers who had been here stayed under this hazardous conditions."
Azizi said the owner would be slapped with compounds for illegally burying toxic waste and neglecting to upkeep the area which has also become an Aedes mosquito breeding ground.
"They have been operating here for about two years, and this land was initially approved for chicken rearing only. However, the owner started renting out this area to a third party who used it as an illegal dump site."
He also stressed that MPS would now inspect all factories or sites near rivers to check on their waste disposal methods to ensure water streams are not affected by industrial waste discharges.
Members of the Rawang Fire and Rescue Department's Hazardous Material Team (Hazmat), who were also present during the raid, spent a few hours digging the soil and extracting samples.
Its station chief Mohd Haikal Md Kasri said his team of 35 personnel found one type of solid and two types of liquids, believed to be toxic materials, buried in the soil.
"We also found 20 to 30 barrels of unidentified toxic waste scattered at the site."
Land and Mines Department officers, who were also present, said they would issue a notice under Section 128 of the National Land Code, ordering the owner to restore the land back to its agricultural land status.
Its officer, Sazuli Hamdan, said the department would take immediate action to seize the land if the owner did not comply.
"The owner is still answerable to the use of the land irregardless of who ran this illegal operations. It is his land and he is responsible."
Also present were Department of Environment officers who also took samples of the toxic wastes and said that a full report would be completed in three to four weeks.
Meanwhile, when asked on the severity of the water pollution, Syabas public relations officer Priscilla Alfred declined to comment until investigations were carried out by their officers.
Selayang Municipal Council president Mohd Azizi Mohd Zain (third from left) and officers checking on the abandoned drums and other materials left at the site. Pic by Syarafiq Abd Samad


Read more: Illegal dump site sealed - General - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/nation/general/illegal-dump-site-sealed-1.384528#ixzz2tYcadMy4

Saturday, September 28, 2013

KL Eco Film Fest highlights

FROM exploring nature’s powerful role in children’s health and development to the resurgence of electric vehicles, Kuala Lumpur’s innovative environmental film festival has something for everyone.

Now in its sixth year, the Kuala Lumpur Eco Film Festival, sponsored by Maybank Foundation and Taiwan-based software company Cyberlink, has become one of the country’s grandest and most influential purveyors of environmental film. Many national premieres are included in the line-up including documentaries, narratives, animations and short films. Films are shown throughout the city at partnering museums, embassies, libraries, universities and local theatres.
With a programme curated to offer fresh views on global environmental issues, most of the screenings are accompanied by discussions with filmmakers, environmental experts and special guests.
This year’s festival, which runs from Oct 11-13, will include 66 films from 13 countries, including 18 national premieres. Some highlights include:

A FIERCE GREEN FIRE: THE BATTLE FOR A LIVING PLANET
The film is an exploration of the environmental movement — grassroots and global activism — spanning 50 years from conservation to climate change. From halting dams in the Grand Canyon to battling 20,000 tonnes of toxic waste at Love Canal; from Greenpeace saving the whales to Chico Mendes and the rubber tappers saving the Amazon; from climate change to the promise of transforming our civilisation, the film tells vivid stories about people fighting — and succeeding — against enormous odds.
Narrated by Robert Redford, Meryl Streep, Ashley Judd, Van Jones, and Isabel Allende Directed by Mark Kitchell
Running time: 114mins
Screening date: Oct 11, 8pm
Segaris Art Centre, Publika

CHASING ICE
Chasing Ice is the story of one man’s mission to change the tide of history by gathering undeniable evidence of our changing planet. Within months of his first trip to Iceland, the photographer conceived the boldest expedition of his life: The Extreme Ice Survey. With a band of young adventurers in tow, Balog began deploying revolutionary time-lapse cameras across the brutal Arctic to capture a multi-year record of the world’s changing glaciers.
Directed by Jeff Orlowski
Running time: 75 minutes
Screening date: Sept 30, 8pm
The Square, Publika

REVENGE OF THE ELECTRIC CAR
Revenge of the Electric Car The film presents the recent resurgence of electric vehicles as seen through the eyes of four pioneers of the EV revolution. As more models of electric cars than ever before start to arrive in showrooms and driveways across the world, Chris Paine’s film offers an inspiring, entertaining and definitive account of this revolutionary moment in human transportation.
Directed by Chris Paine
Running time: 90 minutes
Screening date: 12 Oct, 8.30pm
The Square, Publika.

SURVIVING PROGRESS
But what if progress is actually spiraling us towards collapse? Ronald Wright, whose best-seller, A Short History Of Progress inspired Surviving Progress, shows how past civilisations were destroyed by “progress traps” — alluring technologies and belief systems that serve immediate needs, but ransom the future. As pressure on the world’s resources accelerates and financial elites bankrupt nations, can our globally-entwined civilisation escape a final, catastrophic progress trap?
Directed by Mathieu Roy, Co-Produced by Martin Scorsese
Running time: 86 minutes.
Screening date: Oct 1, 8pm
Table 23 Restaurant

PANDORA’S PROMISE
Impact Partners, in association with Vulcan Productions and CNN Films, presents this groundbreaking new film by Academy-Award-nominated director Robert Stone. The atomic bomb and meltdowns like Fukushima have made nuclear power synonymous with global disaster. But what if we’ve got nuclear power wrong?
An audience favourite at the Sundance Film Festival, Pandora’s Promise asks whether the one technology we fear most could save our planet from a climate catastrophe, while providing the energy needed to lift billions of people in the developing world out of poverty.
Stone tells the intensely personal stories of environmentalists and energy experts who have undergone a radical conversion from being fiercely anti to strongly pro-nuclear energy, risking their careers and reputations in the process. He also exposes this controversy within the environmental movement head-on with stories of defection by heavy weights including Stewart Brand, Richard Rhodes, Gwyneth Cravens, Mark Lynas and Michael Shellenberger.
Running time: 77 mins
Screening date: Oct 13, 8.30pm
The Square, Publika

Other partners include MAP Publika, UEM Sunrise, Tanamera Tropical Spa Products, Go International, Palate Palette, the Ford Environmental and Conservation Grants Foundation, with IACT College as the official University Partner, and the Tinai Eco Film Festival as its international film festival partner.
For more info visit www.ecofilmfest.my



Read more: KL Eco Film Fest highlights - Live - New Straits Times http://www.nst.com.my/life-times/live/kl-eco-film-fest-highlights-1.364218#ixzz2tZ8zCsv7