https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/02/world/europe/plastic-whale-dead-italy.html?action=click&module=MoreInSection&pgtype=Article&region=Footer&contentCollection=Europe


Whale Is Found Dead in Italy With 48 Pounds of Plastic in Its Stomach
Plastic recovered from the belly of the whale.CreditSEAME Sardinia Onlus,
via Associated Press
Whale Is Found Dead in Italy With 48 Pounds of Plastic in Its Stomach
A Whale Is Found Dead in Italy With 48 Pounds of Plastic in Its Stomachsperm
whale was found
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/02/world/europe/plastic-whale-dead-italy.html?action=click&module=MoreInSection&pgtype=Article&region=Footer&contentCollection=Europedead
last week in Porto Cervo, in northern Sardinia.CreditSEAME Sardinia Onlus,
via Associated Press
Image
A sperm whale was found dead last week in Porto Cervo, in northern Sardinia..
CreditCreditSEAME Sardinia Onlus, via Associated Press

By Iliana Magra <https://www.nytimes.com/by/iliana-magra>

   - April 2, 2019
   -
      -
      
<https://www.facebook.com/dialog/feed?app_id=9869919170&link=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2019%2F04%2F02%2Fworld%2Feurope%2Fplastic-whale-dead-italy.html&smid=fb-share&name=Whale%20Is%20Found%20Dead%20in%20Italy%20With%2048%20Pounds%20of%20Plastic%20in%20Its%20Stomach&redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2F>
      -
      
<https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=https%3A%2F%2Fnyti.ms%2F2uHzX6y&text=Whale%20Is%20Found%20Dead%20in%20Italy%20With%2048%20Pounds%20of%20Plastic%20in%20Its%20Stomach>
      -
      
<?subject=NYTimes.com%3A%20Whale%20Is%20Found%20Dead%20in%20Italy%20With%2048%20Pounds%20of%20Plastic%20in%20Its%20Stomach&body=From%20The%20New%20York%20Times%3A%0A%0AWhale%20Is%20Found%20Dead%20in%20Italy%20With%2048%20Pounds%20of%20Plastic%20in%20Its%20Stomach%0A%0AThe%20pregnant%20animal%2C%20which%20washed%20ashore%20in%20Sardinia%2C%20was%20the%20latest%20in%20a%20grim%20international%20collection%20of%20whale%20carcasses%20burdened%20by%20plastic%20trash.%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2019%2F04%2F02%2Fworld%2Feurope%2Fplastic-whale-dead-italy.html>
      -
      -

More than 48 pounds of plastic, including disposable dishes, a corrugated
tube, shopping bags and a detergent package with its bar code still
visible, were found inside a dead sperm whale in Italy, the World Wildlife
Fund said on Monday.

The whale, a young female, washed ashore in Porto Cervo, a seaside resort
in the north of the Italian island of Sardinia. It was also carrying a
fetus “in an advanced state of decomposition,” the fund said.

This was the latest in a grim international collection of whale carcasses
burdened by dozens of pounds of plastic trash.

Last month, a whale was found dead on a Philippine beach
<https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/18/world/asia/whale-plastics-philippines.html?module=inline>
with
88 pounds of plastic in its body. More than 1,000 assorted pieces of
plastic were discovered inside a decomposing whale in Indonesia
<https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/21/world/asia/whale-plastics-indonesia.html?module=inline>
in
November. A sperm whale died in Spain
<https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/12/science/sperm-whale-death-spain.html?module=inline>
last
year after being unable to digest more than 60 pounds of plastic trash.
Image
Plastic recovered from the belly of the whale.CreditSEAME Sardinia Onlus,
via Associated Press

“The amount of plastic found in the cetacean’s digestive tract was
practically intact, and the proportion between the size of the animal and
the ingested plastic is particularly significant,” it said in a statement
on Monday.

Europe is the second-largest producer of plastics in the world, “dumping
150,000-500,000 tons of macroplastics and 70,000-130,000 tons of
microplastics in the sea every year,” according to a report
<https://wwf.fi/mediabank/11094.pdf> the fund published in June.

Surveys suggest that has left the Mediterranean with some of the highest
microplastic pollution levels in the world
<https://www.nature.com/articles/srep37551#t1>.
 Partly in response to such findings, the European Union Parliament voted
last week
<http://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20190321IPR32111/parliament-seals-ban-on-throwaway-plastics-by-2021>
 to approve a ban on many single-use plastic products, including disposable
plastic straws, cutlery and plates.

Those measures are scheduled to take effect by 2021. On Sunday, in a
Facebook post that featured a picture of the dead whale
<https://www.facebook.com/SergioCostaMinistroAmbiente/photos/a.377699326073786/572204329956617/?type=3&theater>,
Italy’s environment minister, Sergio Costa, promised his country would be
one of the first to carry out the ban.

This sort of pollution, he wrote, “afflicts the whole marine world, not
just Italy, of course, but every country in the world has the duty to apply
the policies to fight it: not today, yesterday.”

“Is there still someone who says that these are not important problems?” he
asked.

Kirim email ke