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How plastic pollution poses a challenge for Canada's marine conservation September 22, 2024

  • Sep 21, 2024
  • 2 min read

Updated: Sep 22, 2024


How plastic pollution poses a challenge for Canada's marine conservation.
How plastic pollution poses a challenge for Canada's marine conservation. (Picture credit: AP)

By AFP - Agence France Presse


How plastic pollution poses a challenge for Canada's marine conservation

by Mathiew LEISER


One of the largest producers of plastic waste per capita, Canada is struggling to protect its designated marine protected areas from this pollution, experts warn.


Here are some key points about the issue facing North American countries.


Significant plastic pollution

With more than four million tonnes produced each year, Canada generates "two to four times more" plastic pollution per person than the global average, said Anthony Merante of the NGO Oceana.


In 2020, more than 90 percent of plastic waste ended up in landfills or was incinerated, and only seven percent was recycled, according to the Canadian Environment Ministry.


The remaining roughly two percent, or 90,000 tonnes, ended up in the environment.


"Plastic pollution is so ubiquitous at this point, we can't protect marine protected areas from plastic pollution unless we stop plastic pollution at the source," said Merante, head of Oceana Canada's plastics campaign.


Globally, annual plastic production has more than doubled in 20 years to reach 460 million tonnes.


According to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), only nine percent is recycled.


And more than half of it is single-use packaging—"things that we use for a few moments, and that end up lasting hundreds of years," said Merante.


New regulations

In June 2022, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's federal government banned six types of single-use plastics to achieve zero plastic waste by 2030.


The regulation is being challenged in court by Canadian and American plastics manufacturers and petrochemical firms.


Several municipalities, including Montreal, Vancouver, and Edmonton, have already banned certain single-use plastics.


More biodegradable utensils are being found on the banks near the island city of Montreal, said Anne-Marie Asselin, a marine biologist who has been carrying out collection campaigns along the Saint Lawrence River for five years.


This shows that people's "behaviors have not changed," but the kind of waste now generated has "much less impact on the environment," she noted.


Ottawa is also working on creating a federal plastics registry.

The goal is to hold manufacturers accountable by requiring them to report on the life cycle of the plastics they put into circulation.


In the case of federal marine protected areas, few measures have been put in place against plastic pollution.


The Department of Fisheries and Oceans maintains that it is, however, "taken into account" when creating new marine protected areas and that since 2019, it has been prohibited to dump waste in protected areas.


maw/amc/bjt

 
 
 

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