Funded by the European Commission’s LIFE Programme and co-financed by PlasticsEurope, the four-year LIFE Blue Lakes project aims to reduce and prevent the presence of microplastics in the Italian and German lakes through a series of actions involving institutions, local authorities, companies and citizens. The aim is to derive measures for their reduction and containment.

 

Blue Lakes EU Project

Photo: Elia Andreotti

Microplastics are increasingly entering the Italian lakes impacting water quality, biodiversity and potentially human health. Results of data tracking their presence in the waters of Lake Garda, Trasimeno and Bracciano are indicating an alarming increase in the average concentration of plastic microparticles per km². Despite their different morphological and ecosystem characteristics, particles found in these three lakes went from 135,188 in 2017 to 549,020 in 2019 per km² – a combined increase of more than 400% in just three years. In other European waters, the situation is not very differnt, too. Thus, the plastics industry is supporting the LIFE Blue Lakes project, helping to tackle this rising problem.

Helping to contain microplastics

Virginia Janssens, Managing Director of PlasticsEurope, said: “Plastic waste is unacceptable in any environment. Our participation in the Blue Lakes project reflects our commitment to finding solutions to some of our most pressing environmental issues, in particular marine litter. We know that tackling the problem at source is crucial and to be truly effective requires multi-stakeholder collaboration at local, European and International level. PlasticsEurope is proud to be a key supporter of this project alongside players from across the value chain, environmental organisations, civil society and policymakers. It is with an open and ongoing collaborative approach to joint initiatives and programmes such as this, that we can drive the change urgently needed.”

Five lakes in focus

LIFE Blue Lakes will focus its actions on three Italian and two German lakes to design and test standard protocols on pilot areas, with the aim of developing and implementing good practices extended to other European lake communities.

PlasticsEurope is actively involved in the ongoing scientific assessment of the potential impact of microplastics on human health and environment. Collaborating with key partners in identifying the science gaps, and contributing to the development of standard methodologies, protocols and analytical methods*.

For more details on the European Commission’s LIFE Blue Lakes project, go here.