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Call For Emergency Research Of Tsunami Debris

Debris off the Honshu Coast soon after the tsunami
U.S. Navy
Debris off the Honshu Coast soon after the tsunami

A year after the devastating earthquake in Japan, up to 100,000 tons of tsunami-generated debris is posing an urgent threat to coastal economies in the western U.S. That’s according to Senators Maria Cantwell and Mark Begich, who have written a letter to President Barack Obama, asking that emergency research funds from the National Science Foundation be mobilized to help scientists hone in on what needs to be done to prepare for the arrival of the debris.

The senators held a press conference in Seattle where they also expressed concern about a proposed 25 percent cut in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s funding for shoreline cleanup.

Senator Cantwell says a derelict fishing boat spotted this week off the coast of Canada is a stark reminder of what is headed for U.S. coasts.

"This recent vessel appearing off the coast, I think gave everybody the understanding that this debris could be moving faster than people realized," Cantwell says. "So we want the administration to work faster on a concrete plan that helps us have an adequate response to tsunami debris."

Suspected tsunami debris has already begun reaching the coast of Alaska. Other landings are expected in Hawaii and the Pacific Northwest within a year. Cantwell and Begich are concerned about the potential economic impacts it will have on shipping lanes, fishing and tourism in their states. And they say satellite data that is classified could be released to tsunami researchers –- as has been done in support of climate change research -– to help predict how much trash will arrive and exactly when.

Copyright 2012 KPLU. 

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