THE HAGUE – Untreated sewage pouring into the world’s seas and oceans is polluting their water and coastlines and endangering the health and welfare of the people and animals that inhabit them, according to a bleak new UN report released yesterday.
As well as the growing problem of sewage, oceans also are suffering from rising levels of nutrients such as run-off from agricultural land triggering toxic algal blooms that deprive the water of oxygen, destruction of coastal ecosystems such as mangroves and a rising tide of ocean litter, says the UN Environment Programme’s State of the Marine Environment report. “An estimated 80 per cent of marine pollution originates from the land and this could rise significantly by 2050 if, as expected, coastal populations double in just over 40 years time and action to combat pollution is not accelerated,” UN Environment Programme chief Achim Steiner said.”We perhaps in the 20th century thought we could use the oceans as our sewage treatment plants,” Steiner told reporters in The Hague.”This sewage is not just something that goes into the sea.”The report, which pulled together data from governments and researchers around the world, warned that climate change and loss of ice is opening up Arctic regions to shipping and oil exploration raising the possibility of spills there and said that oil pollution was severe around ports in countries including Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, Nigeria and Pakistan.Another problem for coasts and coral reefs is the varying amount of sediments reaching them because of developments like dams and deforestation.”Some coastlines …are shrinking because the soils are being trapped by barrages upstream,” the report warned.”Others are suffering for precisely the opposite reason – artificially high amounts of sediments are now swilling down rivers choking sea grass beds, silting up coral reefs and clogging up other important habitats and coastal ecosystems.”It estimated that tackling the sewage problem alone will cost an extra US$56 billion each year worldwide.Steiner said that dealing with one of the problems highlighted in the report – destruction of coastal ecosystems like wetlands – could let nature give humanity a helping hand in preventing pollution.”In many countries we are losing nature’s capacity to actually deal with some of the sewage and effluents because we are destroying the wetlands that could provide us – particularly coastal wetlands – with filtration capacity to avoid the kind of runoff into the sea,” he said.”We also need to rediscover or demonstrate how maintaining wetlands …can avoid heavy infrastructure investments because nature can cope with a certain degree of pollution, particularly if you use its natural mechanisms.”Nampa-AP”An estimated 80 per cent of marine pollution originates from the land and this could rise significantly by 2050 if, as expected, coastal populations double in just over 40 years time and action to combat pollution is not accelerated,” UN Environment Programme chief Achim Steiner said.”We perhaps in the 20th century thought we could use the oceans as our sewage treatment plants,” Steiner told reporters in The Hague.”This sewage is not just something that goes into the sea.”The report, which pulled together data from governments and researchers around the world, warned that climate change and loss of ice is opening up Arctic regions to shipping and oil exploration raising the possibility of spills there and said that oil pollution was severe around ports in countries including Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, Nigeria and Pakistan.Another problem for coasts and coral reefs is the varying amount of sediments reaching them because of developments like dams and deforestation.”Some coastlines …are shrinking because the soils are being trapped by barrages upstream,” the report warned.”Others are suffering for precisely the opposite reason – artificially high amounts of sediments are now swilling down rivers choking sea grass beds, silting up coral reefs and clogging up other important habitats and coastal ecosystems.”It estimated that tackling the sewage problem alone will cost an extra US$56 billion each year worldwide.Steiner said that dealing with one of the problems highlighted in the report – destruction of coastal ecosystems like wetlands – could let nature give humanity a helping hand in preventing pollution.”In many countries we are losing nature’s capacity to actually deal with some of the sewage and effluents because we are destroying the wetlands that could provide us – particularly coastal wetlands – with filtration capacity to avoid the kind of runoff into the sea,” he said.”We also need to rediscover or demonstrate how maintaining wetlands …can avoid heavy infrastructure investments because nature can cope with a certain degree of pollution, particularly if you use its natural mechanisms.”Nampa-AP
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