The costs of removing the unsanctioned import of marine plastic litter to small island states
Autor
Burt, April J.
Raguain, Jeremy
Sanchez, Cheryl
Brice, Jude
Fleischer‑Dogley, Frauke
Goldberg, Rebecca
Talma, Sheena
Syposz, Martyna
Mahony, Josephine
Letori, Jake
Quanz, Christina
Ramkalawan, Sam
Francourt, Craig
Capricieuse, Ivan
Antao, Ash
Belle, Kalsey
Zillhardt, Thomas
Moumou, Jessica
Roseline, Marvin
Bonne, Joel
Marie, Ronny
Constance, Edward
Suleman, Jilani
Turnbull, LindsayA.
Institución
Resumen
Small island states receive unprecedented amounts of the world’s plastic waste. In March 2019, we
removed as much plastic litter as possible from Aldabra Atoll, a remote UNESCO World Heritage Site,
and estimated the money and efort required to remove the remaining debris. We removed 25 tonnes
at a cost of $224,537, which equates to around $10,000 per day of clean-up operations or $8,900
per tonne of litter. We estimate that 513 tonnes (95% CI 212–814) remains on Aldabra, the largest
accumulation reported for any single island. We calculate that removing it will cost approximately
$4.68 million and require 18,000 person-hours of labour. By weight, the composition is dominated by
litter from the regional fshing industry (83%) and fip-fops from further afeld (7%). Given the serious
detrimental efects of plastic litter on marine ecosystems, we conclude that clean-up eforts are a vital
management action for islands like Aldabra, despite the high fnancial cost and should be integrated
alongside policies directed at ‘turning of the tap’. We recommend that international funding be made
available for such eforts, especially considering the transboundary nature of both the marine plastic
litter problem and the ecosystem services provided by biodiversity-rich islands.