Wednesday, September 10, 2025

 

Ranking the Countries Driving the Ocean Plastic Crisis

  • Between 2010 and 2019, over 2.6 million tonnes of China’s plastic waste leaked abroad, making it the largest contributor.

  • Seven of the top 10 countries responsible for ocean plastic leakage are in Asia, driven by rapid growth and weak waste systems.

  • Marine plastic costs the global economy up to $19 billion annually, with prevention measures projected to exceed $86 billion.

In the past decade, plastic pollution has become one of the most visible environmental issues worldwide. Every year, millions of tonnes of plastic enter the ocean, affecting marine life, coastal communities, and ecosystems.

This visualization, via Visual Capitalist's Bruno Venditti, ranks the countries responsible for the highest cumulative leakage of mismanaged plastic waste that escaped and washed up on other countries’ beaches from 2010 to 2019.

The data for this visualization comes from the Global Plastic Hub.

Asia Leads in Ocean Plastic Leakage

China is the largest contributor, responsible for over 2.6 million tonnes of plastic waste that ended up on foreign beaches.

It’s followed by the Philippines (1.7 million tonnes), and India (966,000 tonnes).

Rapid economic growth, urbanization, and inadequate waste management systems contribute to these high figures.

Seven of the top 10 countries on the list are in Asia, underlining the region’s central role in the global ocean plastic crisis.

Rank

Country

Tonnes (2010-2019)

1

China

2,683,631

2

Philippines

1,695,260

3

India

966,447

4

Brazil

639,665

5

Indonesia

599,020

6

Nigeria

496,841

7

Viet Nam

484,457

8

Turkey

354,441

9

Thailand

338,685

10

Malaysia

332,756

11

Bangladesh

315,755

12

Venezuela

231,132

13

Bird Island

231,132

14

Myanmar

209,495

15

Egypt

208,321

16

Algeria

157,952

17

Tanzania

114,737

18

Ghana

107,907

19

Taiwan, Province of China

97,418

20

Uruguay

94,544

21

Tunisia

89,176

22

Haiti

84,238

23

Dominican Republic

83,121

24

Libya

73,477

25

Mozambique

72,578

26

Cameroon

67,709

27

Côte d'Ivoire

57,394

28

Pakistan

53,641

29

Angola

52,877

30

Colombia

47,506

31

Morocco

44,087

32

Sri Lanka

41,648

33

Peru

39,863

34

Papua New Guinea

36,165

35

Yemen

35,625

36

Trinidad and Tobago

35,244

37

Benin

32,298

38

Togo

31,773

39

Mexico

31,004

40

South Africa

30,352

41

Ecuador

29,678

42

Solomon Islands

27,939

43

Honduras

26,859

44

Greece

25,983

45

Ukraine

25,859

46

Guinea

25,167

47

Comoros

24,691

48

Sierra Leone

23,826

49

Hong Kong, China

23,471

50

Russian Federation

20,770

51

Senegal

19,569

52

Lebanon

19,420

53

Guatemala

19,015

54

Albania

18,501

55

U.S.

16,910

56

Panama

16,346

57

Jamaica

16,260

58

Belize

15,383

59

Guyana

15,235

60

Nicaragua

15,199

61

Liberia

14,220

62

Kuwait

12,740

63

Gambia

12,178

64

Suriname

11,589

65

Sudan

11,308

66

Guinea-Bissau

10,819

67

Iran

10,750

68

Congo

9,476

69

Democratic People's Republic of Korea

8,873

70

Kenya

7,941

71

El Salvador

7,504

72

Netherlands

6,488

73

UK

6,242

74

Timor-Leste

6,238

75

Italy

5,930

76

Spain

5,708

77

Canary Islands (Sp.)

5,708

78

Eritrea

5,677

79

Equatorial Guinea

5,328

80

Argentina

4,847

81

Costa Rica

4,384

82

Saudi Arabia

4,099

83

Croatia

3,964

84

Djibouti

3,401

85

Japan

3,208

86

Syrian Arab Republic

3,019

87

Australia

2,920

88

Ashmore & Cartier Is.

2,920

89

Republic of Korea

2,865

90

Mauritania

2,845

91

United Arab Emirates

2,659

92

Somalia

2,371

93

Israel

2,368

94

Fiji

2,340

95

Cambodia

2,212

96

Gabon

2,199

97

Madagascar

2,132

98

Germany

1,899

99

Romania

1,825

100

Montenegro

1,804

101

Saint Lucia

1,591

102

Chile

1,447

103

Sao Tome and Principe

1,255

104

France

1,105

105

Vanuatu

997

106

Cape Verde

975

107

Qatar

868

108

Samoa

809

109

Brunei Darussalam

797

110

Portugal

702

111

Azores Islands (Port.)

702

112

Madeira Islands (Port.)

702

113

Grenada

553

114

Sweden

514

115

Ireland

508

116

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

466

117

Poland

439

118

Georgia

424

119

Canada

421

120

Dominica

408

121

Finland

397

122

Namibia

387

123

Barbados

302

124

Puerto Rico (USA)

287

125

Oman

258

126

Tonga

246

127

Latvia

211

128

Bahrain

204

129

Bahamas

179

130

Antigua and Barbuda

172

131

Micronesia

167

132

DRC

149

133

Norway

130


Plastic Waste Doesn’t Stay Local

Plastic debris often travels thousands of kilometers across oceans, carried solely by currents, wind, tides, and time.

For example, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch—a massive swirling zone between California and Hawaii—accumulates plastic from as far as Asia, North America, and South America.

The patch spans around 1.6 million km², comparable to twice the size of Texas.

The annual economic costs due to marine plastic pollution are estimated to be between $6-19 billion. According to the OECD, preventing land-based plastic leakage into the ocean across 38 member countries and 10 major plastic waste emitters in Asia and Africa could cost more than $86 billion.

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Ranked: The Most Expensive U.S. Wildfires, So Far on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

By Zerohedge

 

Rio Tinto to buy carbon credits from A$250M agriculture platform

Stock image.

Canadian pension fund La Caisse, together with Australia’s Clean Energy Finance Corp. (CEFC), is investing A$250 million in the launch of a diversified agricultural platform designed to generate Australian carbon credit units (ACCUs).

The platform — named Meldora — will combine sustainable agricultural production with large-scale environmental plantings under the ACCU scheme, a joint statement said on Monday.

Underpinning the investment is a commitment by global miner Rio Tinto (ASX: RIO) to serve as a “foundational offtaker” for the carbon credits generated by Meldora. The firm’s aim is to halve its scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2030 from 2018 levels, and the credits are expected to account for up to 10% of the reduction.

The Meldora platform will be managed by Australian agriculture and natural capital asset manager, Gunn Agri Partners (GAP). As its first asset, Meldora has purchased a farm of over 15,000 hectares in central Queensland to practice sustainable agriculture and carbon capture and storage.

Under the “environmental plantings” methodology for ACCUs, native vegetation is planted and maintained for a minimum of 25 years for some projects and as long as a century for others, providing long-term carbon sequestration and biodiversity benefits.

“This investment is a timely step toward advancing resilient, climate-smart agriculture in Australia, while delivering measurable environmental and economic value,” said Emmanuel Jaclot, EVP and head of infrastructure and sustainability at La Caisse, which contributed A$200 million of the investment, with CEFC committing an additional A$50 million.

“This initiative represents a long-term investment in nature and land-based strategies in Australian agriculture,” Heechung Sung, CEFC’s head of natural capital, added. “It’s a great privilege to again be able to work with La Caisse and GAP to invest in this strategy and alongside Rio Tinto, who have demonstrated with their long-term offtake, a commitment to invest in high-integrity carbon credits.”

 

Vale says fire extinguished at Brazil terminal will not affect shipments

Vale’s Ponta da Madeira terminal in in São Luís, Brazil. (Image courtesy of Vale SA).

Brazilian miner Vale said on Tuesday that firefighters employed by the company have extinguished a fire that hit an auxiliary tower at its maritime terminal Ponta da Madeira, located in northeastern Brazil.

In a statement to Reuters, Vale said the fire did not impact its schedule for iron ore shipments nor the volumes of the steelmaking material it expects to ship out.

(By Marta Nogueira and Amy Lv; Editing by Sarah Morland)

 

Freeport shares sink after workers trapped at Grasberg mine

The Grasberg mine on the island of New Guinea, is one of the world’s biggest sources of copper and gold. (Image from Google Earth)

Freeport-McMoRan (NYSE: FCX) shares sank Tuesday after the company suspended operations at its Grasberg Block Cave underground mine in Indonesia, where a surge of wet material blocked access routes and left seven workers trapped underground.

The incident occurred late Monday evening in one of five production blocks within the mine, located in Central Papua.

According to the company, the location of the workers is known, and they are believed to be safe. Crews are working to clear debris and secure safe evacuation routes, while support is being provided to the trapped workers.

Shares of Freeport fell 5.81% Tuesday morning following the announcement, giving the miner a market capitalization of $63 billion.

“All other personnel at the site are confirmed safe,” Freeport said in a statement.

“Our team is working diligently to bring our team members to safety as quickly as possible,” Chairman Richard C. Adkerson and CEO Kathleen Quirk said in a statement.

Freeport said no timeline has been provided for the evacuation of the workers or the resumption of production.

The Grasberg operation is one of the world’s largest copper and gold mines, with annual output of about 1.7 billion pounds of copper and 1.4 million ounces of gold from three mines in the district. Freeport holds a 48.76% stake in the complex, while Indonesia’s state-owned mining company holds the majority interest.

Indonesia’s mining minister, Bahlil Lahadalia, said on Tuesday that his team would visit the site to assess conditions and provide updates.

The suspension initially pressured copper prices. The most-active COMEX futures contract was down 0.15% at $4.552 per lb ($10,014/t) on Tuesday morning.

Freeport Indonesia has previously forecast copper concentrate output of nearly 3 million metric tons in 2025. Any extended disruption at Grasberg could add supply-side uncertainty to already tight copper markets.