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Canada tidies up nearly 700 metric tons of lost fishing equipment from 2022 storm Fiona

Canada stated on Monday it helped pay for the removal of 695 metric tons of lost fishing gear in Atlantic Canada, which was struck by storm Fiona in 2022.

The storm rise swept up fishing devices such as nets and rope, referred to as ghost gear, throughout Fiona, which reached Canada as an effective post-tropical storm. The equipment, a form of plastic pollution, threatens marine mammals and fisheries.

Fiona required evacuations as wind gusts reached 170 km per hour (106 miles per hour) and the surge engulfed homes on the shoreline.

Canada announced results of the clean-up as global leaders collect in Ottawa this week to deal with drafting a first-ever global treaty to control skyrocketing plastic pollution.

The Canadian federal government helped pay for the clean-up from a. C$ 30 million ($ 21.89 million) fund it developed after Fiona,. Fisheries Minister Diane Lebouthillier stated.

Ghost equipment threatens the sustainability of fisheries, which. harms the financial prosperity of seaside neighborhoods, she stated.

Lost fishing equipment is a worldwide issue, including in the. upper Andaman Sea off Thailand, where an estimated 30% of. endangered marine life is impacted by plastic contamination.

Canada is working on a plan to avoid fishing gear loss in. the future, the fisheries department said.

Industrial fishers in Canada are needed to report lost. gear to the federal fisheries department.

Ingrid Giskes, senior director of International Ghost Equipment. Initiative, the international NGO for marine preservation group,. said that abandoned fishing equipment is the most dangerous plastic. pollution in the ocean.

It's made to capture and eliminate marine life and it will. continue to do so after it's lost she said.

(source: Reuters)