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Deadliest Catch: Thailand s Ghost Fishing Nets Help COVID-19 Fight – Channels Television

Channels Television     Underwater divers in plastic-choked waters off the coast of Thailand snip through discarded nets tangled around a reef a new initiative helping protect marine life and aiding the fight against coronavirus. The “ghost nets” discarded from the country’s lucrative fishing industry are a deadly source of plastic pollution, ensnaring turtles and cutting into delicate coral beds. Left unattended, “they could stay adrift for decades, either entrapping or becoming the food of marine animals,” says Ingpat Pakchairatchakul of the London-based Environmental Justice Foundation. Ingpat was speaking to AFP during a recent boat trip off the coast of Chonburi province, as a team of more than 30 divers hacked away at stubborn threads enveloping a reef 27 metres (90 feet) below the vessel.

Deadliest catch: Thailand s ghost fishing nets help Covid fight

Deadliest catch: Thailand s ghost fishing nets help Covid fight AFP 1/22/2021 AFP © Lillian SUWANRUMPHA The ghost nets discarded from the country s lucrative fishing industry are a deadly source of plastic pollution Underwater divers in plastic-choked waters off the coast of Thailand snip through discarded nets tangled around a reef a new initiative helping protect marine life and aiding the fight against coronavirus. The ghost nets discarded from the country s lucrative fishing industry are a deadly source of plastic pollution, ensnaring turtles and cutting into delicate coral beds.  Left unattended, they could stay adrift for decades, either entrapping or becoming the food of marine animals, says Ingpat Pakchairatchakul of the London-based Environmental Justice Foundation.

Thailand recycle ghost nets into useful plastic items to fight coronavirus pandemic- Technology News, Firstpost

Clearing up Thailand s discarded fishing nets helps clear seas and the fight against Covid-19

CHONBURI (AFP) - Underwater divers in plastic-choked waters off the coast of Thailand snip through discarded nets tangled around a reef - a new initiative helping protect marine life and aiding the fight against coronavirus. The ghost nets discarded from the country s lucrative fishing industry are a deadly source of plastic pollution, ensnaring turtles and cutting into delicate coral beds. Left unattended, they could stay adrift for decades, either entrapping or becoming the food of marine animals, says Ingpat Pakchairatchakul of the London-based Environmental Justice Foundation. Ingpat was speaking to AFP during a recent boat trip off the coast of Chonburi province, as a team of more than 30 divers hacked away at stubborn threads enveloping a reef 27 metres below the vessel.

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