Marine Litter: Solutions for a Cleaner Ocean
September 28-29, 2022, Brest, France


The Workshop
Workshop Announcement
Full Print Version
List of Participants
Workshop Material
The Road Map
Background Material
Related Sites
SeaTechWeek Special Session
IEEE OES Initiative
Brest 2019 Workshop
Oceans 2019 Town Hall
Brest 2018 Workshop
For User
User Access

Announcements

[2022/09/05] We are conducting a pre-Workshop rating of priority actions. For that, we opened the survey and rating of Priority Actions to reduce current and future Marine Debris in the Marine Debris Virtual Community Center (VCC) at https://www.place4us.net/MarineDebris. The resulting priority actions will be used at the workshop as a starting point for our deliberations. Please, do submit your priority actions even if you are not able to participate in the workshop. To participate in the survey and rating you have to sign up at the VCC Reception, login, and then use the Elevator to get to Floor 10 "Participatory Modeling". Enter the floor, and then click on [Ratings] in the leftside menu. Open the one rating. Until September 16, 2022, we are collecting priority actions, and the rating will take place afterwards. Additional priority actions can be submitted when the rating is alread going on. Please, submit you priority actions ...

Note that after signing up at https://www.place4us.net/MarineDebris/index.php?file=Portal&floor=Reception&action=sign_up, you will receive an email with a temporary password. If this email does not show up in your inbox more or less immediately, it ended up in your Spam folder - please check there.

[2022/05/10] Registration is open. See Logistics for details or go directly to the [Workspace] to register.

Goals and Scope

The 2022 workshop is a follow-up of the first two Brest Workshops on "Technologies for Observing and Monitoring Plastics in the Oceans" in 2018 and "Marine Debris Indicators: What’s Next?" in 2019.

This third workshop is a participatory workshop aiming at the broadening of our community and the identification of priority actions that we want to implement after the workshop. The objective of the workshop is to assess options for the prevention of marine litter entering the ocean and the reduction of marine litter — in particular plastics — in the ocean. Bringing together a wide range of stakeholders, we will identify priorities for a cleaner ocean and develop action plans for these priorities. These priority actions will be integrated into the refined road map developed during the first two workshops. A workshop statement will make recommendations to major institutions and funding agencies based on the priority identified and action plans developed by the workshop participants.

This workshop follows the IEEE special session entitled "Marine Litter: Solutions for Monitoring, Mitigation and Prevention" taking place on Sept 27, 2022 during the Sea Tech Week®, Sept. 26-30 2022, in BREST, France.

Previous Workshops

The November 2018 workshop on “Technologies for Observing and Monitoring Plastics in the Oceans” focused on technology initiatives able to address the mounting global marine debris with particular focus on plastics in the ocean. A main challenge addressed was the development of a methodology for monitoring marine debris indictors, in particular the Indicator 14.1.1 “Index of coastal eutrophication and floating plastic debris density” of SDG 14 “Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development.” The major outcome of this workshop was a set of activities and goals for six months, two years and 5 years, which provided an initial road map (see Garello et al., 2019).

The December 2019 workshop on “Marine Debris Indicators: What's Next” brought together experts on observations and monitoring of marine debris and plastic with decision and policy makers in need of comprehensive information on this challenge. A main goal was to converge towards common best practices and potential standards. With relevant stakeholders present, the workshop fostered a collaborative network to ensure that evidence-based decision and policymaking are possible. The workshop explored the potential for a platform linking the data to actions and develop an implementation strategy for observing networks and modeling platforms to support conjointly the different efforts to address the global challenge of marine debris. The draft road map compiled in 2018 was augmented with more detailed six-months activities and a case study on “Reducing Plastics in the Ocean within a Growing Global Economy: Understanding the Information Needs to Support Interventions” was initiated. This case study would prepare the current workshop.

Pre-Workshop Activities

Workshop participants and other stakeholders are asked to identify their priorities and to share them before the workshop. A form will be available from September 1, 2022 in the Marine Debris Virtual Community Center (https://www.place4us.net/MarineDebris) to submit priorities. This form will allow for a rating of priorities by all registered users of the Marine Debris VCC. For the workshop, the rating outcomes will be used to have a starting set of priorities.

We are also developing a white paper on citizen science within the wider field of marine debris. This paper is also developed in the Marine Debris VCC. Workshop participants interested in contributing to this paper can express their interest in the Marine Debris VCC in the Chat room on Citizen Science.

Participation

The workshop will bring together a broad range of stakeholders from the Earth observation communities, research communities assessing the intermediate and longterm impacts of marine debris, United Nations and national agencies engaged in progress towards SDG 14, businesses that are aiming to tackle various aspects of the problem of marine debris, as well as, experts working at the interfaces between these communities with the goal to ensure that useable knowledge required for policy making and planning of action to address the challenge of marine debris is created and well linked to the decision makers.

Workshop Outcomes

The main outcomes of the workshop will be a white paper identifying priorities for actions that could lead to a cleaner ocean. This white paper will also assess knowledge needs related to these priority actions and consider options for interventions that address these priorities. Among others, the white paper will also summarize the current state of knowledge concerning options for a clean ocean, identify emerging technologies and technology needs, and make recommendations to relevant stakeholders (agencies, companies, researchers) concerning systemic and technology developments to tackle the challenge of marine litter. The priority actions identified by the workshop participants will be integrated into the road map that was developed during the first two workshops.

A workshop statement will concisely point out the priorities and make recommendations for actions that can address these priorities. A workshop report will document the workshop proceeds and provide detailed background for the workshop recommendations.

Marine Litter Session @Sea Tech Week®

Special Session on Marine Litter @Sea Tech Week®

The IEEE Oceanic Engineering Society is organizing a special session entitled "Marine Litter: Solutions for Monitoring, Mitigation and Prevention" taking place on Sept 27, 2022 during the Sea Tech Week®, Sept. 26-30 2022, in BREST, France. The special session will precede and inform the workshop on “Marine Litter: Solutions for a Cleaner Ocean”, that will be held on Sept 28 to 29, 2022.Convenor: IEEE-OES and Laboratory for Ocean Physics and Satellite remote sensing (LOPS) (France)

While quantitative information on production and use of plastics is to some extent available, the amount and fate of plastics discarded or leaked into the environment is highly uncertain. In particular, knowledge of how much plastics, at different scales down to micro and nano levels, reaches the ocean and the pathways and fate of such plastic in the ocean remain poorly known.

A focus is needed on how science and technology could quantify the pervasiveness of marine pollution and facilitate an understanding of the mitigating impact of reducing the stock of plastics in the ocean. The goals for meeting such a challenge go through the determination of a strategy for monitoring marine litter in the ocean and develop solutions for addressing the problem.

More information on this session is available here. Note that there will be a registration fee for participation in the Sea Tech Week®. A one-day ticket (including lunch and coffee breaks) is €125 plus VAT, and here is the page that details all the information.

The main theme of the conference is: Maritime Transport: towards smarter and greener solutions. The featured country of honour is India, and the special focus this year is on women in marine science and technology.

Special Issue

The human presence in the coastal environment is increasing rapidly, accompanied by an equally rapid growth in the built environment and consumer goods in the coastal zone. An increasing fraction of the urban population is in megacities that are located in the coastal zone or in the flood plains of major rivers. The urbanization of the coastal zone is expected to continue for the foreseeable future. At the same time, the coastal zone is exposed to a changing spectrum of natural hazards originating in the atmosphere–ocean and terrestrial systems. The way coastal urban areas are developed today creates a risk with potentially significant harmful impacts for future generation. This risk could be reduced through new designs of the urban coasts that ensure the built environment is adapted to the changing spectrum of hazards and through international rules for the abandonment of urban coasts that can no longer be defended against sea encroachment. This would help to bring current actions in line with normative ethics and reduce threats to the marine biosphere and future human generations. We invite papers that address all aspects of the threats the urban coast might pose to the ocean, including the development of the urban coast, the changing coastal hazard spectrum, the risk of marine debris originating in the urban coast, the impacts this debris might have on the marine biosphere, alternatives for the design of the urban coast that would reduce this risk, and ethical challenges in governing risks to future generations in designing today’s urban coast.

Go to special issue page ...

See more pictures of plastics pollution here ...

Read about solutions here ...