Challenges

This coming weekend, April 21-23 is Adopt-a-Beach spring kickoff for 2023. Adopt-a-Beach is a program of the Alliance for the Great Lakes. If you live in the Great Lakes region, the Alliance can help you find a beach clean-up – or organize one! 

At a beach clean-up organized in coordination with the Alliance, there is a leader who helps distribute materials (e.g. gloves, buckets) and gives an overview of the data collection aspect of the clean-up. Adopt-a-Beach volunteers have been collecting data during beach clean-ups since 2003. To do this, someone is tasked with keeping track of what trash is being pick-up, and at the end of the event, the weight of it. 

The data has shown a number of things: Volunteers are removing close to 15 tons of trash from beaches each year. About 85% of this trash is made entirely or partially of plastic. 25% of litter picked up is food-related – like plastic cups, utensils and takeout containers. Much of the plastic collected are small pieces that have already broken down or off of a larger piece. These tiny pieces matter! During a cleanup it’s easy to realize that they are actually the most likely trash to be eaten by animals in and around the lakes when they mistake the microplastics for pieces of food.

Things that I love about beach clean-ups: on-boarding is quick, they are hands-on, physical activities outdoors, and they can be a great group or solo activity. 

I’ve participated in three different beach clean-ups thus far and each one was rewarding and satisfying in its own way. In July 2022 I was at Euclid Beach on Lake Erie at 7 AM on a Saturday morning on my own for a beach clean-up organized by the Cleveland Metroparks. Everything about the outing was a joy: the water was beautiful, the beach was quiet and there were few people out when I got started. By 8:30 when the clean-up ended, there were people walking and biking, a number of whom stopped to thank me for my efforts. I drove home with the windows open listening to a good podcast and was home in time for breakfast with my family.

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The issue: Plastic pollution is a problem in the Great Lakes. Research from the Rochester Institute of Technology estimates that over 22 million pounds of plastic enter the Great Lakes each year. 

Why this matters: Over time plastic breaks down into smaller and smaller pieces and particles that can end up in drinking water and living organisms in the lakes. These microplastics may eventually be ingested by humans when we eat or drink something with lake origin. Plastic particles have even been found in beers brewed in the Great Lakes region. While the full impact on the animal and human body is not known, there are concerning aspects of humans ingesting about a credit card sized amount of plastic each week (an official estimate according to the Alliance for the Great Lakes).    

close up photo of plastic bottle

What actions can you take? 

Reduce your own plastic use. Think more expansively than just eliminating single-use plastic drink containers and grocery bags – although do these for sure! Could you eliminate ziploc and single-use snack bags? Could you replace hand soap and dish soap containers with a permanent container and purchase larger refill containers? Could you replace a takeout order with eating in a restaurant or cooking at home? Could you forgo one to-go coffee a week? The Alliance for the Great Lake has a plastic-free toolkit for download if you want to explore more possibilities.

Learn more about the concept of extended producer responsibility. Creating new laws around this concept would require plastic producers to be responsible for their products through the product’s full lifecycle. Over time these laws would force producers to eliminate the most harmful plastics, pay for disposal, or produce less plastic. You can visit the Alliance for the Great Lakes action center to send congressional delegates a message requesting they support extended producer responsibility legislation. 

Lead or participate in beach clean-ups if you live near a Great Lake. More about this in my next post. Stay tuned! 

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Climate change is a journey that we are all on for the rest of our lives. So let’s get right to the point: How will climate change impact the Great Lakes?

climate road landscape people
Photo by Markus Spiske on Pexels.com

Warming temperatures, extreme weather and precipitation events and changes in growing seasons will impact the Great Lakes in many ways, notably:

  1. Increase in invasive species;
  2. Expansion of harmful algal blooms;
  3. Fluctuation of water levels; 
  4. Decline in coastal health.

Why do these matter? 

Some of these threats will be the subject of their own posts in the future. But a few connections for foundational understanding. 

As a fragile ecosystem, the Great Lakes have already been permanently damaged by invasive species. When non-native species are introduced by deliberate or accidental human activity, they often have no natural predators. Invasive species can decrease native fish or other species and degrade lake aesthetic value, threatening existing ecologies and economies. The zebra mussel infestation is one of the most prominent invasive species storylines of the Great Lakes. The mussels, which likely arrived in ballast waters or on ships from international seas, prolifically filter out algae that native species need for food, essentially sucking life out of the Great Lakes. They have created a dramatic upset in the ecosystem and, by reducing plant and animal life in the lakes, make them more prone to harmful algae. The mussels are also a physical nuisance, littering beaches, clogging pipes and even damaging boat motors.   

Harmful algal blooms upset the ecological balance of nutrients, plants and animals in and around the lakes. They can impact the respiratory health of animals and humans and they can threaten access to clean drinking water. The drinking water crisis in Toledo, Ohio in July 2014 raised awareness of this issue, but did not yield political or popular willpower to change human activity, notably in the agricultural sector, creating some of the challenge. 

Scientists see a future of significant water level variability due to climate change. High water levels and powerful waves and storms are causing coastal damage, including infrastructure damage along the shoreline and eroding beaches. A March 2020 analysis of rising Lake Michigan waters led the city of South Haven, Michigan to cite a cost of $16M to repair damage to infrastructure of the marina, stormwater pipes and utility lines and to make necessary improvements to their water filtration plant.

Low water levels due to greater evaporation as the climate warms put shipping, recreation and hydropower at risk and increases the possibility of harmful algal blooms, which thrive in shallower, warmer waters.   

Climate change also exacerbates existing water inequities.  Low-income communities and communities of color often bear the burden of environmental threats to the Great Lakes since they are often located in closer proximity to polluted waterways and access points and are more likely to have old and deteriorating infrastructure (e.g. lead water lines; older sewer pipes).

Our climate change journey will not have a happily ever after where everything turns out OK in the end. However, by better educating ourselves about impacts and potential mitigating activities, we can take personal and civic action to try and improve outcomes in our local communities, country and world.

I will continue to profile the impact of climate change on the Great Lakes region; it’s important that we honestly face and navigate the challenges. But I will also explore a connected, but distinct question: Will the Great Lakes region be a climate refuge? Stay tuned.

Sugarloaf Mountain west of Marquette, MI, Lake Superior
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