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Modelling plastic fluxes with INCA-macroplastics in the Imus catchment: impacts of long-term accumulation and extreme events

Authors :
François Clayer
Magnus D Norling
Kathinka Fürst
Rachel Hurley
Glenn Bryan A Creencia
Daeniel Zarene P Msojica
Jose Carlo R Dizon
Yan Lin
Luca Nizzetto
Noel A Sedigo
Marianne Olsen
Hans Fredrik Veiteberg Braten
Source :
Environmental Research Letters, Vol 19, Iss 1, p 015001 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2024.

Abstract

Plastic environmental pollution is threatening water resources, aquatic ecosystems, and human wellbeing but is still highly uncertain with global fluxes to sea of 0.4–13 Mt\yr, and up to 517 Mt of mismanaged plastics on land. Catchment modelling tools are required to challenge current knowledge, simulate impacts of management initiatives, and complement global and observation-based studies. Here we present the first spatiotemporally explicit model for mismanaged plastic mobilization and transport from land to sea from the INtegrated CAtchment (INCA) family. INCA-Macroplastics encompasses all components of the catchment, is driven by available data (weather, population, solid waste) and enables calibration and validation against diverse observations (river monitoring, household surveys). INCA-Macroplastics was applied to the Imus River, Philippines, one of World’s most polluted rivers. Given large uncertainties on catchment plastic retention, two calibrations and two emission scenarios were developed to describe catchment plastic fluxes, residence time and stocks over 1990–2020. Plastic fluxes to the sea are highly variable over years and seasons (55–75% exported during the wet season) and have increased exponentially over 1990–2020 from 5–100 to 2000–15000 tons\yr. INCA-Macroplastics is the first model handling plastic accumulation on land and highlights the importance of extreme flooding events in mobilizing and transporting legacy plastics. Model outputs explicitly show that current land plastic pollution can impact fluxes to the ocean for up to 30 years into the future. INCA-Macroplastics is useful to provide tailored recommendations for local monitoring, testing waste management scenarios and pointing towards future research avenues.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17489326 and 23811137
Volume :
19
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Environmental Research Letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.233f8d8f92b04c4791e2381113798065
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad163f