Marine debris in Malaysia: A review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures

The launch of Roadmap towards Zero Single-use Plastics in 2018 demands baseline data on the management of marine debris in Malaysia. In 2021, Malaysia is placed 28th top plastic polluter in the world with plastic consumption at 56 kg/capita/year, therefore data on mismanaged plastic is imperative. T...

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Main Authors: Fauziah, Shahul Hamid, Rizman-Idid, Mohammed, Cheah, Wee, Loh, Kar-Hoe, Sharma, Sahadev, NoorMaiza, M. R., Bordt, Michael, Praphotjanaporn, Teerapong, Samah, Azizan Abu, Sabaruddin, Johan Shamsuddin bin, George, Mary
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Published: Elsevier 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/34426/
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spelling my.um.eprints.344262022-09-13T08:22:14Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/34426/ Marine debris in Malaysia: A review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures Fauziah, Shahul Hamid Rizman-Idid, Mohammed Cheah, Wee Loh, Kar-Hoe Sharma, Sahadev NoorMaiza, M. R. Bordt, Michael Praphotjanaporn, Teerapong Samah, Azizan Abu Sabaruddin, Johan Shamsuddin bin George, Mary GC Oceanography GE Environmental Sciences The launch of Roadmap towards Zero Single-use Plastics in 2018 demands baseline data on the management of marine debris in Malaysia. In 2021, Malaysia is placed 28th top plastic polluter in the world with plastic consumption at 56 kg/capita/year, therefore data on mismanaged plastic is imperative. This paper reviews the abundance and distribution of marine debris in selected Malaysian beaches over the last decade (2010-2020) and discusses issue on its management. Plastic debris on beaches in Malaysia, was reported to range from 64 items/ m2, to as high as 1930 items/m2, contributing 30-45% of total waste collected. Plastics film was the most dominant, mainly originated from packaging materials. Therefore, appropriate action including improved marine waste management system is crucial to tackle the problem, together with effective governance mechanisms. Various suggestions were proposed based on the statistical-environmental data to reduce the occurrence of marine debris in the country. Elsevier 2021-06 Article PeerReviewed Fauziah, Shahul Hamid and Rizman-Idid, Mohammed and Cheah, Wee and Loh, Kar-Hoe and Sharma, Sahadev and NoorMaiza, M. R. and Bordt, Michael and Praphotjanaporn, Teerapong and Samah, Azizan Abu and Sabaruddin, Johan Shamsuddin bin and George, Mary (2021) Marine debris in Malaysia: A review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 167. ISSN 0025-326X, DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112258 <https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112258>. 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112258
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic GC Oceanography
GE Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle GC Oceanography
GE Environmental Sciences
Fauziah, Shahul Hamid
Rizman-Idid, Mohammed
Cheah, Wee
Loh, Kar-Hoe
Sharma, Sahadev
NoorMaiza, M. R.
Bordt, Michael
Praphotjanaporn, Teerapong
Samah, Azizan Abu
Sabaruddin, Johan Shamsuddin bin
George, Mary
Marine debris in Malaysia: A review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures
description The launch of Roadmap towards Zero Single-use Plastics in 2018 demands baseline data on the management of marine debris in Malaysia. In 2021, Malaysia is placed 28th top plastic polluter in the world with plastic consumption at 56 kg/capita/year, therefore data on mismanaged plastic is imperative. This paper reviews the abundance and distribution of marine debris in selected Malaysian beaches over the last decade (2010-2020) and discusses issue on its management. Plastic debris on beaches in Malaysia, was reported to range from 64 items/ m2, to as high as 1930 items/m2, contributing 30-45% of total waste collected. Plastics film was the most dominant, mainly originated from packaging materials. Therefore, appropriate action including improved marine waste management system is crucial to tackle the problem, together with effective governance mechanisms. Various suggestions were proposed based on the statistical-environmental data to reduce the occurrence of marine debris in the country.
format Article
author Fauziah, Shahul Hamid
Rizman-Idid, Mohammed
Cheah, Wee
Loh, Kar-Hoe
Sharma, Sahadev
NoorMaiza, M. R.
Bordt, Michael
Praphotjanaporn, Teerapong
Samah, Azizan Abu
Sabaruddin, Johan Shamsuddin bin
George, Mary
author_facet Fauziah, Shahul Hamid
Rizman-Idid, Mohammed
Cheah, Wee
Loh, Kar-Hoe
Sharma, Sahadev
NoorMaiza, M. R.
Bordt, Michael
Praphotjanaporn, Teerapong
Samah, Azizan Abu
Sabaruddin, Johan Shamsuddin bin
George, Mary
author_sort Fauziah, Shahul Hamid
title Marine debris in Malaysia: A review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures
title_short Marine debris in Malaysia: A review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures
title_full Marine debris in Malaysia: A review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures
title_fullStr Marine debris in Malaysia: A review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures
title_full_unstemmed Marine debris in Malaysia: A review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures
title_sort marine debris in malaysia: a review on the pollution intensity and mitigating measures
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/34426/
_version_ 1744649179437727744
score 13.160551