Japan
tsunami debris moves towards US and Canada
Wreckage
including lumber, footballs, parts of roofs and factories, and even
bikes will soon start coming ashore in North America
1
May, 2012
Wreckage
from Japan's tsunami – fishing gear and furniture, footballs and
ships – has swept across the Pacific far faster than expected, with
thousands of tonnes projected to land on North American shores this
year.
Scientists
believe lighter objects such as buoys and oil drums began reaching
land last November or December. The rest is spread over thousands of
miles of ocean between the Midway atoll and the northern islands of
Hawaii.
About
95% will probably never come ashore and is destined for that massive
swirl of floating plastic known as the north Pacific garbage patch.
The remaining fraction is due to reach the west coast of the US and
Canada in October.
No
one expects to wake up one morning to a tsunami of rubbish. "It
is not like you are going to be standing on the beach looking at the
horizon and see a wall of debris come in," said Nicholas Mallos,
a marine debris expert at the Ocean Conservancy.
But
there have already been some bizarre finds. This week a beachcomber
in British Columbia found a moving crate containing a rusting
Harley-Davidson motorcycle registered to Japan's Miyagi prefecture,
which absorbed the brunt of the tsunami. The crate also contained a
set of golf clubs.
Last
month a a football washed up on an uninhabited island off Alaska and
was traced to its owner, a Japanese schoolboy from the town of
Rikuzentakata which was almost flattened by the tsunami. A 160ft
fishing boat, the Ryou-Un Maru, drifting to within 300 miles of the
British Columbia coast before it was deemed a hazard to shipping and
sunk by the US coastguard, was also found.
Washington
state officials last week put up posters advising residents what may
arrive on their beaches, from common litter to aluminium canisters
possibly containing insecticide, and derelict boats.
Personal
belongings should be treated with respect, the posters said. "It
is extremely unlikely any human remains from the tsunami will reach
the US," they added, but if people did find a body they should
call the authorities.
The
wreckage stems from a vast stretch of Japan's northern coast and was
swept away several days before the meltdown at the Fukushima reactor,
so radiation is not seen as a potential hazard, according to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa).
The
Japanese government estimates 4.8m tonnes of debris – parts of
factorybuildings, houses, cars and trees – were swept into the
ocean during the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami.
Heavy
items sank to the ocean floor close to shore. But at least 1.5m
tonnes of debris, including small ships, lumber, and even steel beams
was carried off by currents and began making the 4,500-mile journey
across the Pacific. Within a month of the tsunami, the debris had
dispersed and now stretches across 4,000 nautical miles of the north
Pacific. Scientists have only a sketchy notion of what is still out
there, how fast it is travelling, and where and when it might land.
"Most
people probably think there is a huge pile of debris moving across
the ocean like a carpet," said Jan Hafner, of the International
Pacific Research Centre, in Honolulu, Hawaii. "But it is very
sparse, very patchy."
Projections
made by Nikolai Maximenko and Hafner suggested most of the wreckage
would reach North America between March 2013 and March 2014.
But
that did not account for buoyant materials, such as oyster floats,
foot- and volleyballs and lightbulbs, which bobbed on the water, and
were propelled by winds and the ocean current.
A
football or a big float sitting on the water exposed to the wind is
carried by the wind more than the currents," Hafner said. "Wind
blows faster than the typical surface current so those types of
debris are moving faster."
Officials
logged hundreds of reports of those outliers from Oregon, Washington
state, and British Columbia before conceding it was tsunami wreckage.
They
argued many of the findings could not be definitively identified.
People were overly excited, said Kinji Shinoda, the deputy consul
general in Vancouver. "Several newspapers were reporting that
they found pop bottles or cans," he said. "But in some of
the photos the bottles actually had Chinese characters, not Japanese,
so nobody knows where it came from."
A
more definitive picture of the debris is unlikely to emerge before
June or July when two privately-funded expeditions are due to travel
into the north Pacific. But the latest computer models from the
Japanese government and Noaa suggest most of the wreckage that will
make landfall will begin washing up this October and continue into
late 2013.
Washington,
Oregon, British Columbia and Alaska will get much of the debris,
while most of California will be protected by currents pushing
objects back out to sea. Hawaii, however, is in line for several
deposits of tsunami trash.
"It's
going to bounce off the western shore of North America, swing back
south and come back towards Hawaii and enter that big circular area
called the North Pacific Garbage Patch," said Bill Francis,
board president of the Algalita Marine Research Foundation in Long
Beach, California, which will be leading one expedition. "I
heard someone say it's like a big toilet that never flushes. Anything
that floats is going to stay out there and stay out there."
The
US navy and coastguard will be tracking accumulations of debris which
could pose a danger to shipping.
The
tsunami swept as much debris into the ocean in one day as is usually
dumped in a year, threatening wildlife and the Pacific's ecology,
conservationists said. Coral is smothered by plastic, fish get
trapped in drifting nets. Birds die from eating plastic.
"It
is clearly already an ocean problem. We know that all of these
hundreds of tonnes of debris are in the ocean. We know that actually
all of the plastic debris contains a lot of toxins, and we know there
are other types of toxins that would have got into the ocean from the
tsunami and so all of this debris represents a hazard to navigation
and a terrible distress to the ocean ecosystem," said Mary
Crowley, founder of the Ocean Voyages Institute, which will also be
leading an expedition.
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