Priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia

Southeast Asia is considered to have some of the highest levels of marine plastic pollution in the world. It is therefore vitally important to increase our understanding of the impacts and risks of plastic pollution to marine ecosystems and the essential services they provide to support the developm...

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Main Authors: Omeyer, Lucy C. M., Duncan, Emily M., Aiemsomboon, Kornrawee, Beaumont, Nicola, Bureekul, Sujaree, Cao, Bin, Carrasco, Luis R., Chavanich, Suchana, Clark, James R., Cordova, Muhammad R., Couceiro, Fay, Cragg, Simon M., Dickson, Neil, Failler, Pierre, Ferraro, Gianluca, Fletcher, Stephen, Fong, Jenny, Ford, Alex T., Gutierrez, Tony, Shahul Hamid, Fauziah, Hiddink, Jan G., Hoa, Pham T., Holland, Sophie I., Jones, Lowenna, Jones, Nia H., Koldewey, Heather, Lauro, Federico M., Lee, Charlotte, Lewis, Matt, Marks, Danny, Matallana-Surget, Sabine, Mayorga-Adame, Claudia G., McGeehan, John, Messer, Lauren F., Michie, Laura, Miller, Michelle A., Mohamad, Zeeda F., Nor, Nur Hazimah Mohamed, Müller, Moritz, Neill, Simon P., Nelms, Sarah E., Onda, Deo Florence L., Ong, Joyce J. L., Pariatamby, Agamuthu, Phang, Sui C., Quilliam, Richard, Robins, Peter E., Salta, Maria, Sartimbul, Aida, Shakuto, Shiori, Skov, Martin W., Taboada, Evelyn B., Todd, Peter A., Toh, Tai Chong, Valiyaveettil, Suresh, Viyakarn, Voranop, Wonnapinij, Passorn, Wood, Louisa E., Yong, Clara L. X., Godley, Brendan J.
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164276
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-164276
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Environmental engineering
Environmental Governance
Marine Debris
spellingShingle Engineering::Environmental engineering
Environmental Governance
Marine Debris
Omeyer, Lucy C. M.
Duncan, Emily M.
Aiemsomboon, Kornrawee
Beaumont, Nicola
Bureekul, Sujaree
Cao, Bin
Carrasco, Luis R.
Chavanich, Suchana
Clark, James R.
Cordova, Muhammad R.
Couceiro, Fay
Cragg, Simon M.
Dickson, Neil
Failler, Pierre
Ferraro, Gianluca
Fletcher, Stephen
Fong, Jenny
Ford, Alex T.
Gutierrez, Tony
Shahul Hamid, Fauziah
Hiddink, Jan G.
Hoa, Pham T.
Holland, Sophie I.
Jones, Lowenna
Jones, Nia H.
Koldewey, Heather
Lauro, Federico M.
Lee, Charlotte
Lewis, Matt
Marks, Danny
Matallana-Surget, Sabine
Mayorga-Adame, Claudia G.
McGeehan, John
Messer, Lauren F.
Michie, Laura
Miller, Michelle A.
Mohamad, Zeeda F.
Nor, Nur Hazimah Mohamed
Müller, Moritz
Neill, Simon P.
Nelms, Sarah E.
Onda, Deo Florence L.
Ong, Joyce J. L.
Pariatamby, Agamuthu
Phang, Sui C.
Quilliam, Richard
Robins, Peter E.
Salta, Maria
Sartimbul, Aida
Shakuto, Shiori
Skov, Martin W.
Taboada, Evelyn B.
Todd, Peter A.
Toh, Tai Chong
Valiyaveettil, Suresh
Viyakarn, Voranop
Wonnapinij, Passorn
Wood, Louisa E.
Yong, Clara L. X.
Godley, Brendan J.
Priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia
description Southeast Asia is considered to have some of the highest levels of marine plastic pollution in the world. It is therefore vitally important to increase our understanding of the impacts and risks of plastic pollution to marine ecosystems and the essential services they provide to support the development of mitigation measures in the region. An interdisciplinary, international network of experts (Australia, Indonesia, Ireland, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, the United Kingdom, and Vietnam) set a research agenda for marine plastic pollution in the region, synthesizing current knowledge and highlighting areas for further research in Southeast Asia. Using an inductive method, 21 research questions emerged under five non-predefined key themes, grouping them according to which: (1) characterise marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia; (2) explore its movement and fate across the region; (3) describe the biological and chemical modifications marine plastic pollution undergoes; (4) detail its environmental, social, and economic impacts; and, finally, (5) target regional policies and possible solutions. Questions relating to these research priority areas highlight the importance of better understanding the fate of marine plastic pollution, its degradation, and the impacts and risks it can generate across communities and different ecosystem services. Knowledge of these aspects will help support actions which currently suffer from transboundary problems, lack of responsibility, and inaction to tackle the issue from its point source in the region. Being profoundly affected by marine plastic pollution, Southeast Asian countries provide an opportunity to test the effectiveness of innovative and socially inclusive changes in marine plastic governance, as well as both high and low-tech solutions, which can offer insights and actionable models to the rest of the world.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Omeyer, Lucy C. M.
Duncan, Emily M.
Aiemsomboon, Kornrawee
Beaumont, Nicola
Bureekul, Sujaree
Cao, Bin
Carrasco, Luis R.
Chavanich, Suchana
Clark, James R.
Cordova, Muhammad R.
Couceiro, Fay
Cragg, Simon M.
Dickson, Neil
Failler, Pierre
Ferraro, Gianluca
Fletcher, Stephen
Fong, Jenny
Ford, Alex T.
Gutierrez, Tony
Shahul Hamid, Fauziah
Hiddink, Jan G.
Hoa, Pham T.
Holland, Sophie I.
Jones, Lowenna
Jones, Nia H.
Koldewey, Heather
Lauro, Federico M.
Lee, Charlotte
Lewis, Matt
Marks, Danny
Matallana-Surget, Sabine
Mayorga-Adame, Claudia G.
McGeehan, John
Messer, Lauren F.
Michie, Laura
Miller, Michelle A.
Mohamad, Zeeda F.
Nor, Nur Hazimah Mohamed
Müller, Moritz
Neill, Simon P.
Nelms, Sarah E.
Onda, Deo Florence L.
Ong, Joyce J. L.
Pariatamby, Agamuthu
Phang, Sui C.
Quilliam, Richard
Robins, Peter E.
Salta, Maria
Sartimbul, Aida
Shakuto, Shiori
Skov, Martin W.
Taboada, Evelyn B.
Todd, Peter A.
Toh, Tai Chong
Valiyaveettil, Suresh
Viyakarn, Voranop
Wonnapinij, Passorn
Wood, Louisa E.
Yong, Clara L. X.
Godley, Brendan J.
format Article
author Omeyer, Lucy C. M.
Duncan, Emily M.
Aiemsomboon, Kornrawee
Beaumont, Nicola
Bureekul, Sujaree
Cao, Bin
Carrasco, Luis R.
Chavanich, Suchana
Clark, James R.
Cordova, Muhammad R.
Couceiro, Fay
Cragg, Simon M.
Dickson, Neil
Failler, Pierre
Ferraro, Gianluca
Fletcher, Stephen
Fong, Jenny
Ford, Alex T.
Gutierrez, Tony
Shahul Hamid, Fauziah
Hiddink, Jan G.
Hoa, Pham T.
Holland, Sophie I.
Jones, Lowenna
Jones, Nia H.
Koldewey, Heather
Lauro, Federico M.
Lee, Charlotte
Lewis, Matt
Marks, Danny
Matallana-Surget, Sabine
Mayorga-Adame, Claudia G.
McGeehan, John
Messer, Lauren F.
Michie, Laura
Miller, Michelle A.
Mohamad, Zeeda F.
Nor, Nur Hazimah Mohamed
Müller, Moritz
Neill, Simon P.
Nelms, Sarah E.
Onda, Deo Florence L.
Ong, Joyce J. L.
Pariatamby, Agamuthu
Phang, Sui C.
Quilliam, Richard
Robins, Peter E.
Salta, Maria
Sartimbul, Aida
Shakuto, Shiori
Skov, Martin W.
Taboada, Evelyn B.
Todd, Peter A.
Toh, Tai Chong
Valiyaveettil, Suresh
Viyakarn, Voranop
Wonnapinij, Passorn
Wood, Louisa E.
Yong, Clara L. X.
Godley, Brendan J.
author_sort Omeyer, Lucy C. M.
title Priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia
title_short Priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia
title_full Priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia
title_fullStr Priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia
title_full_unstemmed Priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia
title_sort priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in southeast asia
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164276
_version_ 1756370594663759872
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1642762023-01-14T23:32:45Z Priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia Omeyer, Lucy C. M. Duncan, Emily M. Aiemsomboon, Kornrawee Beaumont, Nicola Bureekul, Sujaree Cao, Bin Carrasco, Luis R. Chavanich, Suchana Clark, James R. Cordova, Muhammad R. Couceiro, Fay Cragg, Simon M. Dickson, Neil Failler, Pierre Ferraro, Gianluca Fletcher, Stephen Fong, Jenny Ford, Alex T. Gutierrez, Tony Shahul Hamid, Fauziah Hiddink, Jan G. Hoa, Pham T. Holland, Sophie I. Jones, Lowenna Jones, Nia H. Koldewey, Heather Lauro, Federico M. Lee, Charlotte Lewis, Matt Marks, Danny Matallana-Surget, Sabine Mayorga-Adame, Claudia G. McGeehan, John Messer, Lauren F. Michie, Laura Miller, Michelle A. Mohamad, Zeeda F. Nor, Nur Hazimah Mohamed Müller, Moritz Neill, Simon P. Nelms, Sarah E. Onda, Deo Florence L. Ong, Joyce J. L. Pariatamby, Agamuthu Phang, Sui C. Quilliam, Richard Robins, Peter E. Salta, Maria Sartimbul, Aida Shakuto, Shiori Skov, Martin W. Taboada, Evelyn B. Todd, Peter A. Toh, Tai Chong Valiyaveettil, Suresh Viyakarn, Voranop Wonnapinij, Passorn Wood, Louisa E. Yong, Clara L. X. Godley, Brendan J. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences and Engineering Engineering::Environmental engineering Environmental Governance Marine Debris Southeast Asia is considered to have some of the highest levels of marine plastic pollution in the world. It is therefore vitally important to increase our understanding of the impacts and risks of plastic pollution to marine ecosystems and the essential services they provide to support the development of mitigation measures in the region. An interdisciplinary, international network of experts (Australia, Indonesia, Ireland, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, the United Kingdom, and Vietnam) set a research agenda for marine plastic pollution in the region, synthesizing current knowledge and highlighting areas for further research in Southeast Asia. Using an inductive method, 21 research questions emerged under five non-predefined key themes, grouping them according to which: (1) characterise marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia; (2) explore its movement and fate across the region; (3) describe the biological and chemical modifications marine plastic pollution undergoes; (4) detail its environmental, social, and economic impacts; and, finally, (5) target regional policies and possible solutions. Questions relating to these research priority areas highlight the importance of better understanding the fate of marine plastic pollution, its degradation, and the impacts and risks it can generate across communities and different ecosystem services. Knowledge of these aspects will help support actions which currently suffer from transboundary problems, lack of responsibility, and inaction to tackle the issue from its point source in the region. Being profoundly affected by marine plastic pollution, Southeast Asian countries provide an opportunity to test the effectiveness of innovative and socially inclusive changes in marine plastic governance, as well as both high and low-tech solutions, which can offer insights and actionable models to the rest of the world. National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version This study was supported by the National Research Foundation, Prime Ministers Office (Singapore) and the Natural Environment Research Council (United Kingdom) under the NRF-NERC-SEAP-2020 grant call ‘Understanding the Impact of Plastic Pollution on Marine Ecosystems in Southeast Asia (South East Asia Plastics [SEAP])’. The four funded projects are Risks and Solutions: Marine Plastics in Southeast Asia – RaSP-SEA (NRF Award No. NRF-NERC-SEAP-2020- 0004, NERC Award No. NE/V009354/1 and NE/V009362/1); Southeast Asia Marine Plastics (SEAmap; NERC Award No. NE/V009427/1): Reduction, Control, and Mitigation of Marine Plastic Pollution in the Philippines; Microbial transformation of plastics in Southeast Asian seas: a hazard and a solution (MicroSEAP; NRF Award No. NRF-NERC-SEAP2020-0002, NERC Award No. NE/V009516/1); and Sources, impacts and solutions for plastics in Southeast Asia coastal environment (NRF Award No. NRF-NERC-SEAP-2020-0003, NERC Award No. NE/V009621/1). 2023-01-13T02:02:47Z 2023-01-13T02:02:47Z 2022 Journal Article Omeyer, L. C. M., Duncan, E. M., Aiemsomboon, K., Beaumont, N., Bureekul, S., Cao, B., Carrasco, L. R., Chavanich, S., Clark, J. R., Cordova, M. R., Couceiro, F., Cragg, S. M., Dickson, N., Failler, P., Ferraro, G., Fletcher, S., Fong, J., Ford, A. T., Gutierrez, T., ...Godley, B. J. (2022). Priorities to inform research on marine plastic pollution in Southeast Asia. Science of the Total Environment, 841, 156704-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156704 0048-9697 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164276 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156704 35718174 2-s2.0-85132728100 841 156704 en Science of the Total Environment © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). application/pdf