Life Underwater is Perishing: This 'Marine Cemetery' is a Red Alert
A 24-year-old climate activist writes about how he has set up a graveyard to raise attention towards nine endangered marine species, and how small lifestyle changes can make a huge environmental impact
Today, we produce about 300 million tonnes of plastic waste each year. That’s nearly equivalent to the weight of the entire human population. As per the UN Environment report 2018, around the world, one million plastic drinking bottles are purchased every minute, while up to 5 trillion single-use plastic bags are used worldwide every year. In total, half of all plastic produced is designed to be used only once—and then thrown away. And well, the next immediate question is- Where does all this plastic land up?
Only nine percent of all plastic waste ever produced has been recycled. About 12 percent has been incinerated, while the rest—79 percent—has accumulated in landfills, dumps or the natural environment.
I’ve been travelling nonstop for the last five years learning about climate crises and actively working towards conserving nature. Travelling gave me my love for nature and my passion to preserve it.
- 100+ paddlers cleaned the Chaliyar river over a 68 km stretch and pledged to give up one single-use plastic thing
- 80+ people collected about 800 kg of garbage from Beypore Beach, Kozhikode, Kerala
- 200+ people participated online and pledged to give up a single-use plastic item
The cemetery depicts nine graves, dedicated to these species:
- Seahorse (Hippocampus)
- Parrotfish (Scariidae)
- Leatherback turtles (Dermochelys coriacea)
- Eagle Rays (Aetomylaeus Vespertilio)
- Sawfish (Pristidae)
- Dugong (Dugongidae)
- Zebra shark (Stegostoma fasciatum)
- Hammerhead shark (Sphyrnidae)
- Miss Kerala (Sahyadria denisonii) - Freshwater Fish
The cemetery opened its gates on December 4, 2019, on World Wildlife Conservation Day, with the support of Clean Beach Mission, District Administration, Kozhikode, and Beypore Port Department. It will act as an eyeopener of the destruction caused by mankind on the planet’s biodiversity in the name of convenience.
It’s been three years since I turned vegan, keeping my Methane footprints low. This lifestyle means saying no to buying products available in plastic packing; I carry a stainless cutlery kit in my backpack at all times.
“It’s just one bottle said 7.8 billion.”
If we don’t start acting now, by 2050, our oceans will have more plastic than fish. It is time we all pledge to discard one single-use plastic item—it could be plastic straws, cutlery, bags, containers, sanitary pads, wet wipes—from our everyday life.
#OnePlasticLess from your life means millions of plastic items cancelled from the environment.
The writer is a responsible traveller and climate change activist. He can be reached at namaste@aakashranison.com