Please select your home edition
Edition
North Sails Performance 2023 - LEADERBOARD

Plastic Waste - Where to from here?

by Jack and Jude 29 Jun 2019 05:19 UTC
Only 9% of plastic has ever been recycled © Clemens Bilan / EPA

Efforts to be eco-friendly seem to have gone to waste as many communities find themselves with nowhere to send their plastic refuse, making it terribly sad for those of us who want to do our bit to save Earth and have been collecting our plastic waste, sorting it, and cleaning it with the inner glow that it will be recycled - And now learning that nearly half is becoming just more landfill!

It's a fact, mixed plastic isn't recyclable. As a society, we have been merrily using plastic just about everywhere thinking it would be recycled. Making it worse, manufacturers have doubled up on the stuff with that in mind. But now, No one wants the stuff! Except the impoverished, who burn it for fuel, releasing horrible toxins. Another fairy-tale blown out the water by human-kind's reckless grip on reality.

Macquarie Harbour Fish Farm trash update

The War on Waste has awoken many of us to the tragic side of plastic. But Jack and Jude are no-strangers to this. These last fifty years we've been seeing increasing human trash on the shores and seas, and on very isolated isles and atolls. Therefore it shouldn't be surprising that we've been rising the alarm about plastic fish farm trash in Macquarie Harbour, which is a very special case for several reasons. One is that it's World Heritage, an area of significance legally protected by international treaties. And secondly, it's a nearly closed body of water that little escapes. And that's an interesting point. What we are finding in Macquarie Harbour illustrates just how much plastic waste escapes from fish farm leases. What we see in that nearly landlocked harbour represents what is escaping from all the other farm leases and gets washed away into the wider seas. Of the fish farms In Macquarie Harbour, Tassal have been in operation since 1986. We'll get to that in a moment.

Macquarie Harbour Farms represents all fish farms

Shifting attention to Macquarie Harbour with its insidious problem of fish farm ropes breaking down into micro-plastic, we received an update from the head of Tassal's Aquaculture, Mr. Mark Asman.

In an email he told us that he'd gone to Macquarie Harbour and walked the shores of Brisbane Bay at the location of our last expose on Fish Farm Trash, and had seen various pieces of debris. And that he has been told the amount of debris is declining (with each successive effort), but it needs continuous effort to get where we want.

He wrote, "So the plan will be to 1. Keep on the culture side by "stopping it at the source" (we think this is having a real impact, just takes time), 2. Continue the regular shore line clean ups by the staff and others and 3. Working on a solution like you mention, a permanent crew to walk the shore lines...I hope to have more clarity on this when you return."

That sounds encouraging. And we sure hope it happens and is not just illusory promises. Mark has been talking about "changing the culture" from our very first conversation.

In replying to Mark's email, we pointed out that Tassal has been in the fish farming business since 1986. That's thirty-three years. And that Tassal employs 1261 people. We know many and they are good people who work hard to produce farmed salmon at approximately 20 leases in six regional areas within Tasmania. Tassal is a public company listed on the ASX. In 2017, Tassal earned a NET profit of A$58.08 million, that's the net increase in shareholders' equity.

Sustainability

Tassal prides itself on not only what it produces but how it produces it. Check out their website. "Our consumers can be confident that the Tassal Salmon has been raised by an environmentally and socially responsible company." In July last year, Tasmania's Department of Primary Industries (DPIPWE) introduced a "zero tolerance" for marine debris. And that for a company claiming such high environmental standards, achieving "zero tolerance" for marine debris should rank above all else.

In our email to Mark, we mentioned that what we recorded in Macquarie Harbour these last couple of years would have been going on for many years at every fish farm lease. The difference? - All that trash floated away across the oceans.

And we had some proactive suggestions to reduce fish farm trash:

  • permanent crew walking the shores collecting trash
  • lengthened the soft eye net ropes so they can be secured to the pens - many blow away
  • filter out the micro-algae when cleaning the nets instead of releasing it to drift round the harbour (the gunge)
  • filter out the molluscs when cleaning the nets instead of releasing them back into the harbour
This article has been provided by the courtesy of jackandjude.com

Related Articles

Jack and Jude: April 2024 update
Maintaining Banyandah is a labour of love Maintaining Banyandah, the vessel we launched in 1974, has become ingrained in our very being. It's not just about keeping her seaworthy; it's about nurturing a connection that runs deeper than the ocean itself. Posted on 15 Apr
Jack & Jude: A sea of beauty
We no longer visit what was once one of the world's seven natural wonders We first took our sons to explore the Coral Coast and Great Barrier Reef in the 1970s, when we were often the only vessel in an anchorage, and catching a fish dinner was so easy, we simply jumped over the side to pick which one. Posted on 4 Jul 2021
Jack & Jude: Closing the ring
Leaving Orford, our next few voyages were a treat It's a misty wet Sunday morning and I'm finding it hard to leave my cosy bunk after a long healing sleep. But I'm going to sit up, pull the doona up with me, and tell you about our great escape from Port Davey on Tassie's SW coast. Posted on 1 May 2021
Jack & Jude: Flying high at George Town
We've notched up plenty of sea miles since our last report Have to be swift. Tomorrow, we're sailing off into the never-never. Goodness knows when we'll have communications again. Next stop the fabulous Furneaux Group of islands in Bass Strait off Tasmania's Northeast tip. Posted on 24 Feb 2021
Jack & Jude: A year like no other
We cannot change the past, but the future is within our reach When you last saw a shooting star, did you make a wish? Or wonder what it's like to zoom towards Earth at a zillion miles a second? Well, it's something like that around here right now! Posted on 20 Jan 2021
Amateur radio expeditions to Spratly Islands
We took a group there in 1979 and nearly got blasted out of the water Way back when we were raising two children afloat, we earned our keep by taking brave Amateur Radio Operators to faraway mid-ocean pinpricks of land, where we set up base stations to talk around the world - sometimes contacting upwards of 30,000 stations. Posted on 10 Aug 2020
Jack & Jude: Reflections
An attack waiting behind thick Congo jungle In many ways living through this pandemic is similar to a life-threatening event Jack and Jude survived when just newly wedded kids looking for a place to live our lives. Posted on 31 May 2020
Jack & Jude: Voyage planning rules our lives
Sail through Hells Gate 250 Nautical miles in less than two days, from 10 AM Monday to 3 AM Wednesday, plus another hour to sail through Hells Gate after daylight. Posted on 7 Apr 2020
Four J's Around the World Trilogy
Break the boredom with a great book free from Jack and Jude Break the boredom with a great book free from Jack and Jude. Designed to cure the lockdown blues by reading family fun in exotic places overcoming life-threatening events. Posted on 26 Mar 2020
Where does the time go?
The years whisk past like autumn leaves in a gentle breeze When we sail across an ocean, each day will last a week - until we make port and then the voyage becomes a blip that's hard to remember. The years whisk past like autumn leaves in a gentle breeze. Posted on 5 Aug 2019
Crewsaver 2021 Safetyline FOOTERMarine Products Direct 2023 - Calypso FOOTERNorth Sails Performance 2023 - FOOTER