Amount of plastic in the Atlantic Ocean has been 'massively underestimated'

A study suggests scientists have had a "totally inadequate understanding" of how much plastic is in the water.

The amount of plastic waste in the Atlantic Ocean is said to have been 'massively underestimated'
Image: The amount of plastic waste in the Atlantic Ocean is said to have been 'massively underestimated'
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Estimates for the amount of plastic dumped in the Atlantic Ocean have been "massively underestimated", experts have said.

The mass of so-called invisible microplastics found in the upper waters of the Atlantic has a weight of around 12 to 21 million tonnes, according to new research.

However, the estimate only takes into account three of the most common types of plastic litter in a limited size range.

The figure is comparable in magnitude to estimates of all plastic waste that has entered the Atlantic over the past 65 years - 17 million tonnes, according to a study published in Nature Communications.

This suggests the supply of plastic to the ocean has been substantially underestimated, researchers say.

The study focused on polyethylene, polypropylene and polystyrene, which are the most prominent plastics commercially and also the most littered types, according to the experts.

Professor Richard Lampitt, from the National Oceanography Centre (NOC) and one of the co-authors of the paper, said: "If we assume that the concentration of microplastics we measured at around 200 metres deep is representative of that in the water mass to the seafloor below with an average depth of about 3,000 metres, then the Atlantic Ocean might hold about 200 million tonnes of plastic litter in this limited polymer type and size category.

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"This is much more than is thought to have been supplied."

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The researchers collected seawater samples during the 26th Atlantic Meridional Transect (AMT) expedition in September to November 2016.

They filtered large volumes of seawater at three selected depths in the top 200 metres and detected and identified plastic contaminants using state-of-the-art spectroscopic imaging techniques.

Professor Lampitt said: "In order to determine the dangers of plastic contamination to the environment and to humans we need good estimates of the amount and characteristics of this material, how it enters the ocean, how it degrades and then how toxic it is at these concentrations.

"This paper demonstrates that scientists have had a totally inadequate understanding of even the simplest of these factors, how much is there, and it would seem our estimates of how much is dumped into the ocean has been massively underestimated."

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Katsiaryna Pabortsava, who is also from NOC and is the lead author of the paper, said: "Previously, we couldn't balance the mass of floating plastic we observed with the mass we thought had entered the ocean since 1950.

"This is because earlier studies hadn't been measuring the concentrations of 'invisible' microplastic particles beneath the ocean surface.

"Our research is the first to have done this across the entire Atlantic, from the UK to the Falklands."

The work was funded by the EU H2020 AtlantOS programme and the NOC.

The AMT programme was supported by the UK Natural Environment Research Council's Climate Linked Atlantic Sector Science (Class) programme.