The growing amount of Plastic pollution in our oceans will outweigh the entire ocean fish biomass by the year 2050!
During this week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland,
a report
was released by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation that stated there will be
more plastic pollution than fish in terms of weight in the world's oceans by
2050!
This possibility is tremendously disconcerting to Sea
Port because such a massive mix of slowly decomposing plastic compounds in our
oceans may have negative consequences along the entire marine food chain. From a precautionary perspective, the seafood
industry should add the issue of oceanic plastic pollution to the other ocean
health issues of our time such as ocean warming, acidification, and overfishing.
The seafood industry depends upon healthy and productive marine ecosystems and
we need to be vigilant to all the threats that may jeopardize our long-term
business viability.
Sea Port concurs with the MacArthur report that by transforming
to a “circular
economy” we will help reduce plastic ocean pollution (along with many other
sources of pollution). Sea Port foresees
that this economic transformation will actually be greatly aided by the
projection that by the year 2050 over seventy percent of us will be concentrated
in large cities. Sea Port believes that
this will allow economically efficient hyper-recycling of the majority of the
resources used to advance and maintain our modern societies. By the year 2050,
we therefore predict that there will be very little plastic waste entering our
precious and productive aquatic ecosystems due to hyper-recycling in this new coming
circular economic paradigm.
Please review Sea Port’s past blog post regarding our viewpoint
on hyper-recycling: http://goblueseafoodsustainability.blogspot.com/2015/04/sevenbillion-city-dwellers-implementing.html
Sea Port believes that protecting the productive
capacities of our global aquatic ecosystems from all potential threats is essential
for assuring our wellbeing going forward as our world population swells to 10
billion by the year 2050.
Sincerely,
David Glaubke, Director of Sustainability Initiatives
Sea Port Products