$0.00
Hong Kong has to go the extra mile in tackling marine pollution. As the problem worsens, green groups warn that chemicals from industrial waste also pose potential hazards to marine life and humans. Wang Yuke reports from Hong Kong.
Ocean advocates and volunteers clean up garbage on the Lung Kwu Sheung Tan beach in Tuen Mun. [PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY]
It's a fine day at Discovery Bay — a popular getaway on Lantau Island from Hong Kong's hectic city life — as everything's entrancingly calm and soothing, with the high waves crashing rhythmically against the rocks on the beach, and kites sweeping down low from the azure sky.
Against the backdrop, however, is a mass of snack packages, used face masks, fruit peels, empty bottles and cans, and fragmented foam boxes strewn around beaches amid black garbage bags filled to the brim.
It's the result of the reckless behavior of some members of the public, as well as fishermen, who are the biggest contributors to marine pollution in Hong Kong, said Edwin Lau Che-feng, founder of Green Earth — an environmental group that advocates zero-waste and resource conservation.
Hong Kong has 41 gazetted beaches that are suitable for swimming and managed by the Leisure and Cultural Services Department, and another 49 non-gazetted ones. While non-gazetted beaches aren't easily accessible and not maintained by the government, it doesn't mean they're off the beaten track. Venturing out to these beaches to be closer to nature and take in fresher air, especially during the pandemic, is a much sought-after getaway from the city's hubbub. However, a huge melange of garbage is often left behind by unscrupulous beachgoers, Lau said. Some trash can be traced back to the urban areas or countryside trails, where they're carried by winds or flushed out to the beaches or the sea by rain, he said. During a typhoon, gusts of wind could carry the urban trash all the way to the oceans, Lau said, adding that even residential areas near the shores are filled with litter from elsewhere.
Marine pollution is anything but a new issue in Hong Kong, said David Michael Baker, an associate professor at the University of Hong Kong and an expert in marine pollution. The problem had been chronic even before Hong Kong emerged as a key hub for international trade more than a century ago. It didn't draw serious attention until 30 to 40 years ago when the issue worsened.
The relentless use of plastic bags and packages underlies the rampant plastic pollution problem at local beaches and oceans, Lau said. After the dumped plastic materials are carried out to the waters, the strong waves could break them down into smaller fragments and even pellets over time.
"Ghost nets" are also a menacing common sight in the oceans, left behind by fishermen, according to Lau. When a fishing net gets loose or detached from wherever it is, it becomes a "ghost net" floating around in the water. It's also possible that a fisherman just discards his broken net and throws it into the water, which then rolls along with the waves, collecting and trapping litter in the sea, said Dana Winograd, director operations of Plastic Free Seas.
Winograd has been leading beach cleanups at Discovery Bay with community group DB Green for 14 years, and with Plastic Free Seas throughout Hong Kong for eight years. She doesn't think the problem has improved much in the past few decades, although the only major noticeable change is that fewer plastic bags are being used after the government imposed a plastic bag levy in 2013. "I think this is only temporary," she said. "People are getting used to the extra charge."
According to Winograd, the pollution varies at different beaches and seas. "If you're on eastern Hong Kong Island, Lap Sap Wan, or Clear Water Bay area, you tend to get more fishing gear and apparatus, buoyance, fishing nets and floats. In Aberdeen Marina (a private members' club), you'll see more polystyrene foams because the fishing industry is there. You'll also see more of it on Lamma Island because they drift across the waters. So there may be more certain items in certain locations." Disposable face masks are becoming a common sight.
'We are all connected'
What's quintessential on every beach are plastic packaging, beverage bottles, body-care bottles, polystyrene, toothpaste tubes, toothbrushes, tips of swaps, straws, plastic cups and food wrappings, said Winograd, reciting the long list of garbage commonly seen around Hong Kong's shores.
The volume and severity of sea pollution is also seasonal, closely tied to the currents and rain. "For example, the currents come from the southwest, starting in May, push all the rubbish coming off the land back up on to the southern side of Hong Kong Island, to Lamma Island and Lantau," she said. During the rainy season, rubbish from anywhere in the city could be washed down the storm drains and out into the sea.
Cleaning up beaches is always a taxing, herculean task. They can never been cleaned up thoroughly because the garbage comes in and out in a circular manner. "Anything that gets stuck on the rocks could be washed back out to sea by the high waves and then back again." This is palpable in the months after the typhoon season, which is from late August to late September. Winograd said they can still collect mounds of rubbish left by a typhoon several years ago. She and her team of volunteers have done up to 70 cleanups a year, and an additional 20 times or more if typhoons hit suddenly.
The cleanup after Typhoon Mangkhut in 2018 is still very fresh in her mind. The typhoon blew the trees and bushes all the way up and opened an open air path, which revealed "a cave of polystyrene as high as above my head," recalled Winograd.
A bustling port city, Hong Kong is not immune to cargo vessel collisions and other accidents in maritime trade. While such mishaps are rare, just one single incident, be it a spillage of oil or plastic pellets, could be catastrophic. This has happened in recent years.
"The world is one big ocean and we're all connected," Winograd said. "So our rubbish could end up in Australia, while garbage from Japan could end up on our shores. It's a universal issue."
Likewise, the Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan a decade ago could have a ripple effect. An important lesson from the Japanese tragedy is that the "ocean is a global commons and connects humanity," Baker said. "We should be concerned about how other nations use the ocean for waste removal, as well as the extraction of natural resources."
Microbeads are a form of microplastics, some so minute — just 5 millimeters or smaller — that it can't be seen with the naked eye. It can be found in body care products, like scrubs, and in cleaning products on boats, because of its abrasive property. But it is this nearly invisible item that's causing a menace to marine life.
Filter-feeding animals like oysters, mussels, clams and whale sharks can easily ingest microplastics along with food, explained Winograd. "Then, we, at the top of the food chain, can inadvertently ingest the plastics when eating seafood."
Research conducted by the University of Hong Kong, using 147 fish samples, collected between February 2016 and April 2017 by Plastic Free Seas, revealed that 60 percent of them contained microbeads. A total of 47,241 pieces of microplastics were ingested by the fish samples, of which 1,698 were microbeads. Hong Kong people's love for seafood makes them vulnerable to the potential health hazards of consuming microplastics.
People can't turn a blind eye to the invisible pollutants as their impact is equally disastrous. From a scientist's perspective, Professor Rudolf Wu Shiu-sun of the Education University of Hong Kong frets particularly about the diverse range of chemicals used during industrial production in the Pearl River Delta. His research focuses on the response of marine animals and ecosystems to environmental stresses. The chemicals are present in such a low concentration that the water treatment system can't remove them, he said. "These harmful chemicals disrupt the endocrine systems of both fish and humans (exposed to the chemicals). Worse still, studies have shown that the effect is epigenetic," meaning it can be inherited by the following generations, Wu warned.
The lack of oxygen is another issue confronting Hong Kong waters, Wu said. Since organic pollutants are poured profusely into the Pearl River Delta region, they attract a substantial amount of organisms which are big oxygen consumers, he explained. As the result, the waters are deprived of oxygen, threatening marine life.
What to do next
Thus, reducing the pollutants at the source is the most sustainable and effective answer, he said. "We must find substitutes for the harmful chemicals. They (substitutes) could be expensive and inconvenient, but we've to pay the price for what we've done to the environment. There's no such thing as a free lunch. Before, we served ourselves with the best convenience possible. Now, we've to pay for the inconvenience to marine water."
Wu said that Taiwan's robust and effective recycling system offers a frame of reference for Hong Kong to replicate. "The environmental sense among Taiwan residents is entrenched."
Winograd concedes that public education is vital in disseminating knowledge about marine pollution. "People are unnecessarily responsible for the cleanup, but once they see the polluting eyesores on the beach, which are the stuff they use, they would realize, 'I can be the solution to the problem by using less plastic'." Engaging the public in a beach cleanup or simply leading them on a beach tour can help change behavior, she's convinced. More information and knowledge of marine pollution should also be incorporated in the school curriculum. "Then, we'll see more changes happening because children can influence their parents," Winograd said.
A public consultation exercise on the Producer Responsibility Scheme on Plastic Beverage Containers is underway, and it's an encouraging start that provides an incentive to recycle their bottles, she said. "Psychologically, it also tells people the bottle has value and we should recycle it. We need more such schemes, whether it's a rebate to encourage recycling or a levy to decrease the amount of plastic people use." The government should consider other forms of legislation as well, which could reward companies that reduce plastic packaging, she said.
Baker expects more positive changes to come with collective efforts by the governments of all nations and individuals. "In 2013, the government achieved what I believe is one of the most significant conservation successes in global history. It's the cessation of benthic trawling which was severely damaging the sea floor," he said. "We've also invested in a world-class wastewater treatment system which has restored Victoria Harbour's water quality such that it's again safe for swimming."
The Hong Kong government's investment in regulating heavy metal pollution and organic pollutants has come a long way, Baker said. What tops the agenda now is to "eliminate local stressors to marine life to help enhance their resilience in the face of future climate change".
Among the stressors to contend with is the indiscriminate use of gill nets and illegal trawling, which undermine the conversation progress hard achieved thus far, Baker said.
The marine protected areas are expanding "but, perhaps, not quickly enough," he argued. The SAR government should coordinate with Chinese mainland authorities in accelerating the expansion and optimizing enforcement in the protected areas. After all, Hong Kong cannot afford to ignore the pollutants discharged from other cities in the Pearl River Delta.
"We must also think of connectivity — creating marine protected area networks — because fish do not know where it's safe to stay and where's it's not, and many species of commercial importance are migratory."
"This sort of regulation is necessary if our children are to enjoy a bountiful and healthy ocean," Baker said. "It may seem impossible now, but technological innovations may allow us some day to have zero discharge of waste. I often dream of a day when we can see the bottom of Victoria Harbour filled with fish and marine mammals."
We know that you care how information about you is used and shared and we appreciate your trust in us to do that carefully and sensibly. This Privacy Notice describes how we collect and process your personal information through Polynk.com website, products, services, online and physical stores, and applications that reference this Privacy Notice (together "Polynk.com Services").
1. Controllers of Personal Information
Polynk.com, no 91320481MA215T1W6Q, is responsible for the processing of your personal data. The following is Polynk.com’s contact information: Telephone number: +86 0519 87108958, Address: Room 504, No.85 Shangshang Road, Kunlun Street, Liyang City, Jiangsu Province, China, PR (together "Polynk.com") are data controllers of personal information collected and processed through Polynk.com Services. Details can be found here.
2. What Personal Information About Customers Does Polynk.com Collect?
We collect your personal information in order to provide and continually improve our products and services.
Here are the types of personal information we collect:
.Information you give us: The personal data we process about you are your IP address, your preferences and your activities on our webpage. The cookies collecting information about use of our website collect information in an anonymous form, including the number of visitors to the website, which country the internet connection is from, which web browser and version is used and the title on the pages they visited. If you play a video on our webpage, YouTube might save cookies on your computer depending on your settings. Please review YouTube’s Privacy policy for further information. If you do not want YouTube to save cookies on your computer, do not play any videos on our webpage since YouTube operates these videos. When you accept cookies on your computer you will provide us with your information. If you do not want cookies to be saved on the computer, you can prevent this by not accepting cookies to be saved on your computer. Please note, that if you deny functional cookies the webpage will have limited function.
3. For What Purposes Does Polynk.com Process Your Personal Information?
We process your personal information to operate, provide, and improve Polynk.com that we offer our customers. These purposes include:
Purchase and delivery of products and services. We use your personal information to take and handle orders, deliver products and services, process payments, and communicate with you about orders, products and services, and promotional offers. Provide, troubleshoot, and improve Polynk.com. We use your personal information to provide functionality, analyse performance, fix errors, and improve usability and effectiveness. Recommendations and personalisation. We use your personal information to recommend features, products, and services that might be of interest to you, identify your preferences, and personalise your experience with Polynk.com. Comply with legal obligations. In certain cases, we collect and use your personal information to comply with laws. For instance, we collect from sellers information regarding place of establishment and bank account information for identity verification and other purposes. Communicate with you. We use your personal information to communicate with you in relation to Polynk.com services via different channels (e.g., by phone, email, chat). Advertising. We use your personal information to display interest-based ads for features, products, and services that might be of interest to you. Fraud prevention and credit risks. We process personal information to prevent and detect fraud and abuse in order to protect the security of our customers, Polynk.com, and others. We may also use scoring methods to assess and manage credit risks. Purposes for which we seek your consent. We may also ask for your consent to process your personal information for a specific purpose that we communicate to you. When you consent to our processing your personal information for a specified purpose, you may withdraw your consent at any time and we will stop processing of your data for that purpose.
4. What About Cookies and Other Identifiers?
We use cookies and similar tools to enhance your shopping experience, provide our services, understand how customers use our services so we can make improvements, and display ads. Approved third parties also use these tools in connection with our display of ads. To enable our systems to recognise your browser or device and to provide Polynk.com Services to you, we use cookies. For more information about cookies and how we use them, please read our Cookies Notice.
5. Does Polynk.com Share Your Personal Information?
Information about our customers is an important part of our business and we are not in the business of selling our customers' personal information to others. Polynk.com shares customers' personal information only as described below and with Polynk.com. controls that are either subject to this Privacy Notice or follow practices at least as protective as those described in this Privacy Notice.
Transactions involving third parties: We make available to you services, products, applications, or skills provided by third parties for use on or through Polynk.com Services. For example, you can order products from third parties through our stores. We also offer services or sell product lines jointly with third-party businesses. You can tell when a third party is involved in your transactions and we share customer personal information related to those transactions with that third party. Third party service providers: We employ other companies and individuals to perform functions on our behalf. Examples include fulfilling orders for products or services, delivering packages, sending postal mail and e-mail, removing repetitive information from customer lists, analysing data, providing marketing assistance, providing search results and links (including paid listings and links), processing payments, transmitting content, assessing and managing credit risk, and providing customer service. These third-party service providers have access to personal information needed to perform their functions, but may not use it for other purposes. Further, they must process the personal information in accordance with this Privacy Notice and as permitted by applicable data protection laws. Business transfers: As we continue to develop our business, we might sell or buy other businesses or services. In such transactions, customer information generally is one of the transferred business assets but remains subject to the promises made in any pre-existing Privacy Notice (unless, of course, the customer consents otherwise). Also, in the unlikely event that Polynk.com. or substantially all of its assets are acquired, customer information will of course be one of the transferred assets. Protection of Polynk.com: We release account and other personal information when we believe release is appropriate to comply with the law; enforce or apply our Conditions of Use and other agreements; or protect the rights, property or safety of Polynk.com, our users or others. This includes exchanging information with other companies and organisations for fraud protection and credit risk reduction. Other than as set out above, you will receive notice when personal information about you might be shared with third parties and you will have an opportunity to choose not to share the information.
Transfers out of the European Economic Area and the UK. Whenever we transfer personal information to countries outside of the European Economic Area or the UK, we ensure that the information is transferred in accordance with this Privacy Notice and as permitted by the applicable laws on data protection. We rely on European Commission adequacy decisions or use contracts with standard safeguards published by the European Commission and similar measures under UK laws for such transfers.
6. How Secure is Information About Me?
We design our systems with your security and privacy in mind.
We work to protect the security of your personal information during transmission by using encryption protocols and software. We follow the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) when handling credit card data. We maintain physical, electronic and procedural safeguards in connection with the collection, storage and disclosure of personal customer information. Our security procedures mean that we may ask you to verify your identity before we disclose personal information to you. Our devices offer security features to protect them against unauthorised access and loss of data. You can control these features and configure them based on your needs. It is important for you to protect against unauthorised access to your password and to your computers, devices, and applications. We recommend using a unique password for your Polynk account that is not utilized for other online accounts. Be sure to sign off when you finish using a shared computer.
7. What About Advertising?
Third-party advertisers and links to other websites: Polynk.com Services may include third-party advertising and links to other websites. Third party advertising partners may collect information about you when you interact with their content, advertising, and services. Use of third-party advertising services: We provide ad companies with information that allows them to serve you with more useful and relevant Polynk.com ads and to measure their effectiveness. We never share your name or other information that directly identifies you when we do this.
8. What Information Can I Access?
You can access your information, including your name, address, payment options, profile information, membership, and purchase history in the "My Polynk" section of the website.
9. How Long Do We Keep Your Personal Information?
Your personal data will be sorted out/erased according to the following: Functional cookies will be erased when the web browser is closed. Preference cookies will be erased after 100 days. Analytic cookies will be erased after two years.
10. What rights do I have?
Right to access to your personal data You are entitled to request information about which personal data we process about you and how the personal data is being processed. You also have the right to request a copy of the personal data we process about you. Right to rectification If you consider your personal data that Polynk.com process to be inaccurate, e.g. information concerning your name or address, you have the right to get the inaccurate information corrected and to get the incomplete information completed by providing us with the correct information. Right to erasure You have the right to request that your personal data is erased, e.g. if the processing is no longer relevant in relation to the purpose the information was collected for or if you recall your consent to the processing and there are no other legal ground for the process. Right to limitation of processing You have the right to request limitation of the processing of your personal data, with the exception for storage. Limitation of processing can be requested for example if you object to the accuracy of the personal data or if you consider the processing of your personal data to be unlawful. Right to objection You have the right to object at any time concerning the processing of your personal data in accordance with article 6.1 (e) or (f) (legitimate interest) GDPR, including profiling based on those provisions. Where personal data are processed for direct marketing purposes, you have the right to object at any time to processing of personal data concerning such marketing, which includes profiling to the extent that it is related to such direct marketing. Right to data portability You have the right to obtain the personal data you have provided us with in a structured, commonly used and machine-readable format and have these transmitted to another controller, provided that the process is automatized and that the process is based on a consent or an agreement.
11. EU General Data Protection Regulation and UK Data Protection Laws - Legal Basis
The EU GDPR and UK data protection laws require a legal basis for our use of personal information. Our basis varies depending on the specific purpose for which we use personal information. We use:
Performance of a contract when we provide you with products or services, or communicate with you about them. This includes when we use your personal information to take and handle orders, deliver products and services, and process payments.
Our legitimate business interests and the interests of our customers when we improve Polynk.om services (including when we use your voice, video, or camera input to improve services), when we detect and prevent fraud and abuse in order to protect the security of our customers, ourselves, or others, and when we provide you with interest-based advertising.
Your consent when we ask for your consent to process your personal information for a specific purpose that we communicate to you. When you consent to our processing your personal information for a specified purpose, you may withdraw your consent at any time and we will stop processing of your data for that purpose.
Compliance with a legal obligation when we use your personal information to comply with laws. For instance, we collect seller place of establishment and bank account information for identity verification purposes.
These and other legal bases depending on the purpose for which we use personal information.
We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.
By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies. More info
Cookie Policy/Introduction
Why do we have a privacy policy?
Polynk.com (“we”) care about your privacy. Therefore, we always strive to protect your personal data in the best possible way and to comply with all applicable laws and regulations for the protection of personal data. In this policy, we want to inform you about how we collect and process your personal data in accordance with the EU regulation 2016/679 (“GDPR”) to guarantee an open and transparent processing of your personal data.
Who is responsible for your personal data?
Polynk.com, no 91320481MA215T1W6Q, is responsible for the processing of your personal data. The following is Polynk.com’s contact information: Telephone number: +86 0519 87108958 Address: Room 504, No.85 Shangshang Road, Kunlun Street, Liyang City, Jiangsu Province, China, PR
What personal data do we process?
Polynk.com process information about you when you use Polynk.com’s webpage by saving cookies on your computer. The personal data we process about you are your IP address, your preferences and your activities on our webpage. The cookies collecting information about use of our website collect information in an anonymous form, including the number of visitors to the website, which country the internet connection is from, which web browser and version is used and the title on the pages they visited. If you play a video on our webpage, YouTube might save cookies on your computer depending on your settings. Please review YouTube’s Privacy policy for further information. If you do not want YouTube to save cookies on your computer, do not play any videos on our webpage since YouTube operates these videos. When you accept cookies on your computer you will provide us with your information. If you do not want cookies to be saved on the computer, you can prevent this by not accepting cookies to be saved on your computer. Please note, that if you deny functional cookies the webpage will have limited function.
For what purpose do we process your personal data?
We process your personal data to be able to offer a functional webpage. These functional cookies are essential for your use of the webpage’s features. We also process information about your activities on our webpage over time for non-advertising purposes such as improving the site functionality, the website experience and to improve the website. We also process your personal data to help us remember your preferences such as language or location to create a better experience when visiting the webpage. Who has access to your personal data. As a starting point, your personal data will only be processed by Polynk.com. Our IT suppliers might get access to the personal data and other information when developing and supporting our IT system. These IT supporters only process personal data on our behalf and never on their own behalf.
On what legal ground do we process your personal data?
The legal ground for Polynk.com’s processing of your personal data by saving cookies on your computer is Polynk.com’s legitimate interest under, under article 6.1 (f) GDPR, to process your personal data in order allow you to navigate the site, use our features and for us to remember your preferences (functional and preference cookies). Analytic cookies are processed so that we can improve the webpage’s functionality and the website experience. You can always deny these cookies if you do not want us to save these on your computer.
For how long will we process and store your personal data?
Your personal data will be sorted out/erased according to the following: Functional cookies will be erased when the web browser is closed. Preference cookies will be erased after 100 days. Analytic cookies will be erased after two years.
Transfer of personal data to third countries
As a general principle, Polynk.com only processes your personal data within the EU/EEA. If your personal data would processed outside the EU/EEA, then we will make sure that such processing is either based on a decision from the Commission establishing that the country in question ensures an adequate level of protection or appropriate safeguards that ensure that your rights are protected or based on another ground for such transfer in accordance with GDPR.
Your rights
Right to access to your personal data
You are entitled to request information about which personal data we process about you and how the personal data is being processed. You also have the right to request a copy of the personal data we process about you.
Right to rectification
If you consider your personal data that Polynk.com process to be inaccurate, e.g. information concerning your name or address, you have the right to get the inaccurate information corrected and to get the incomplete information completed by providing us with the correct information.
Right to erasure
You have the right to request that your personal data is erased, e.g. if the processing is no longer relevant in relation to the purpose the information was collected for or if you recall your consent to the processing and there are no other legal ground for the process.
Right to limitation of processing
You have the right to request limitation of the processing of your personal data, with the exception for storage. Limitation of processing can be requested for example if you object to the accuracy of the personal data or if you consider the processing of your personal data to be unlawful.
Right to objection
You have the right to object at any time concerning the processing of your personal data in accordance with article 6.1 (e) or (f) (legitimate interest) GDPR, including profiling based on those provisions. Where personal data are processed for direct marketing purposes, you have the right to object at any time to processing of personal data concerning such marketing, which includes profiling to the extent that it is related to such direct marketing.
Right to data portability
You have the right to obtain the personal data you have provided us with in a structured, commonly used and machine-readable format and have these transmitted to another controller, provided that the process is automatized and that the process is based on a consent or an agreement.
Changes in this policy
Polynk.com is entitled to amend this policy at any time if it is necessary to fulfill the requirements according to applicable laws and regulations or if it is necessary due to changes in Polynk.com operations. In such a situation, Polynk.com will provide information concerning the changes according to applicable law. Applicable information will be available in this privacy policy, on the website of Polynk.com and/or provided in other appropriate ways.
Observance of GDPR
Do not hesitate to contact Polynk.com if you, for any reason, feel unhappy about our processing of your personal data. If you would still be of the opinion that your rights, according to GDPR, have not been satisfied you have the right to send a complaint to the regulatory authority. You will find more information concerning this on www.datainspektionen.se.
Our contact details
If you would like to contact us concerning our processing of your personal data or if you have questions concerning this privacy policy, you are welcome to contact us on gfy@polynk.com. Copyright (©) 2021 Polynk.com
COMMENT