The Mediterranean at risk of becoming ‘a sea of plastic’, WWF warns

Posted on June, 08 2018

Today, plastic represents 95 per cent of the waste floating in the Mediterranean and lying on its beaches.
Rome, Italy – The Mediterranean Sea is turning into a dangerous plastic trap, with record levels of pollution from microplastics threatening marine species and human health, according to a new WWF report released today.

Coinciding with World Oceans Day, the WWF report “Out of the Plastic Trap: Saving the Mediterranean from plastic pollutionraises the alarm on the dramatic effects that excessive plastic use, poor waste management and mass tourism are having on one of the most visited regions in the world.

Bringing together the most recent data and scientific evidence on plastic use in Europe and the many ways in which it impacts marine life, the report presents a detailed roadmap of the urgent actions institutions, businesses and citizens need to take to stop plastic waste from reaching the sea.

“The impacts of plastic pollution in the Mediterranean are also being felt across the world and are causing serious harm both to nature and human health. Worsening plastic pollution will threaten the Mediterranean’s global reputation for tourism and seafood, undermining the local communities who depend on these sectors for their livelihoods. The plastics problem is also a symptom of the overall decline in the health of the Mediterranean and must serve as a rallying call for real action,” said John Tanzer, Leader, Oceans, WWF International.

Today, plastic represents 95 per cent of the waste floating in the Mediterranean and lying on its beaches. Most of this plastic is released into the sea from Turkey and Spain, followed by Italy, Egypt and France, with tourists visiting the region increasing marine litter by 40 per cent each summer.

Large plastic pieces injure, suffocate and often kill marine animals, including protected and endangered species, such as sea turtles and monk seals. But it is microplastics – smaller and more insidious fragments – that have reached record levels of concentration of 1.25 million fragments per km2 in the Mediterranean Sea, almost four times higher than in the “plastic island” found in the North Pacific Ocean. By entering the food chain, these fragments threaten an increasing number of animal species as well as people.

“In Europe, we produce an enormous amount of plastic waste, the majority of which is sent to landfills, resulting in millions of tonnes of plastic entering the Mediterranean Sea each year. This contaminating flow, combined with the Mediterranean being semi-enclosed, has seen harmful microplastics reach record concentration levels, threatening both marine species and human health,” said Giuseppe Di Carlo, Director, WWF’s Mediterranean Marine Initiative.
“We cannot let the Mediterranean drown in plastic. We need to act urgently and across the whole supply chain to save our ocean from the pervasive presence of plastics.”

According to the report, delays and gaps in plastic waste management in most Mediterranean countries are among the root causes of plastic pollution. Out of the 27 million tonnes of plastic waste produced each year in Europe [1], only a third is recycled; half of all plastic waste in Italy, France and Spain ends up in landfills. Recycled plastics currently account for only 6 per cent of plastics demand in Europe.

WWF is urging governments, businesses and individuals to adopt a number of actions to reduce plastic pollution in urban, coastal and marine environments in the Mediterranean and globally. These include:
  • the adoption of a legally-binding international agreement to eliminate plastic discharge into the oceans, supported by strong national targets to achieve 100 per cent plastic waste recycled and reusable by 2030 and national bans for single-use plastic items such as bags.
  •  a call to businesses to invest in innovation and design toward more effective and sustainable plastic use.
“Plastic pollution is too pervasive to be solved by one continent, one government or one industrial sector alone, and it affects us all. It is only by acting together that we can free our oceans, rivers, cities and lives from unnecessary plastic,” concluded Di Carlo.

[1] Europe here refers to: EU-28, Norway and Switzerland.

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Notes to the editor:
  • WWF’s report Out of the Plastic Trap: Saving the Mediterranean from plastic pollution can be downloaded here. Images from the report are available here.
  • Europe (EU 28+ Norway and Switzerland) is the second largest producer of plastics in the world (after China). This results in:
    • 27 million tonnes of plastic waste produced each year; and
    • 70-130,000 of microplastics (fragments smaller than 5mm) and 150- 500,000 million tonnes of macroplastics (the equivalent of 66,000 garbage trucks of plastics) dumped into the Mediterranean and other European seas every year.
  • The Mediterranean holds only 1 per cent of the world’s waters and 7 per cent of global microplastics.
  • The Mediterranean basin (coastal area) is home to 150 million people, who produce among the largest quantities of solid urban waste per capita, at 208-760 kg per year. Summer tourists visiting the Mediterranean generate a 40 per cent increase in marine litter. Debris is also carried to the sea by rivers, primarily the Nile, the Ebro, the Rhone, the Po, and the Ceyhan and Seyhan rivers in Turkey.
  • Plastic pollution can impact key economic sectors in the Mediterranean, especially fisheries and tourism. Marine litter is estimated to cost the EU fishing fleet €61.7 million every year, due to reduction in fish catch, damage to vessels or reduced seafood demand due to concern about fish quality.
  • In the Mediterranean Sea, 134 species (fish, sea turtles, mammals and seabirds) are victims of plastic ingestion;
  • 18 percent of tuna and swordfish are estimated to have plastic debris in their stomach – mostly cellophane and PET;
  • All the sea turtle species living in the Mediterranean have ingested plastics. Up to 150 plastic fragments have been found in some specimens;
  • 90 per cent of the world’s seabirds are estimated to have fragments of plastic in their stomach;
  • Plastics debris in the marine environment, including resin pellets, fragments and microscopic plastic fragments, contain organic contaminants, such as pesticides, phthalates, PCBs and bisphenol A. Once plastic contaminants enter the body, they interfere with important biological processes, causing liver damage or altering hormones.
  • Plankton is highly contaminated in the Pelagos Sanctuary of cetaceans (in the North Western Mediterranean). Concentrations of phthalates found in the tissues of fin whales were up to 4-5 times higher than those of whales from areas with lower levels of contamination.
For further information:
Rucha Naware | WWF International | rnaware@wwfint.org; +32465751339
Stefania Campogianni | WWF Mediterranean Marine Initiative | scampogianni@wwfmedpo.org; +39 346 3873237
The Mediterranean Sea is threatened by plastic pollution
© WWF/ BiancoTangerine
Europe is one of the largest plastic producer. Tonnes of macro and microplastics are entering our seas.
© WWF/BiancoTangerine
All Mediterranean marine species have been impacted by plastic
© WWF/ BiancoTangerine
Plastic is often used for a short time but stays in the environment for hundreds of years
© WWF/ BiancoTangerine