Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2025

Presentation information

[J] Oral

L (Section Leading) » Section Leading

[L-02] Frontiers of Atmospheric and Hydrosphere Sciences 2: Anthropogenic Phenomena and Their Impact

Mon. May 26, 2025 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM Exhibition Hall Special Setting (4) (Exhibition Hall 7&8, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Nobuhito Ohte(Department of Social Informatics, Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University), Kaoru Sato(Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo), Masami Nonaka(Application Laboratory, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology), Chairperson:Nobuhito Ohte(Department of Social Informatics, Graduate School of Informatics, Kyoto University), Kaoru Sato(Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo), Masami Nonaka(Application Laboratory, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology)


3:56 PM - 4:21 PM

[L02-02] Fate and pathways of ocean plastics

★Invited Papers

*Atsuhiko Isobe1 (1.Kyushu University, Research Institute for Applied Mechanics)

Keywords:missing plastics

The fate of mismanaged plastic waste released into oceans (ocean plastics) remains a topic of debate, where the mass imbalance between the leakage and abundance in the world’s oceans appears paradoxical. In the present study, a budget for ocean plastic mass was estimated based on a combination of numerical particle tracking and linear mass-balance models, both validated using a worldwide ocean plastic dataset. Integrating the time series of worldwide macroplastic emission from both rivers and the fisheries industry over the period 1961–2017 yielded a total mass of 25.3 million metric tonnes (MMT). Macro- and microplastics currently floating in the oceans, and microplastics on beaches, each account for 3–4% of the ocean plastics emitted worldwide to date. Overall, 23.4% of ocean plastics were macroplastics on beaches. Meanwhile, 66.7% of ocean plastics were heavier than seawater or microplastics removed from the upper ocean and beaches, which are difficult to monitor under current observation frameworks adopted worldwide. However, the present study on ocean plastics suggested that the whole ocean plastics accounted for only 4.7% of mismanaged plastic waste (542.2 MMT) generated between the 1960s and today.