In New York City, Scuba Divers’ Passion for Sport Becomes Mission to Collect Undersea Litter

Atlantic goliath grouper fish swim near Boynton Beach, Florida on September 10, 2023. (AFP)
Atlantic goliath grouper fish swim near Boynton Beach, Florida on September 10, 2023. (AFP)
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In New York City, Scuba Divers’ Passion for Sport Becomes Mission to Collect Undersea Litter

Atlantic goliath grouper fish swim near Boynton Beach, Florida on September 10, 2023. (AFP)
Atlantic goliath grouper fish swim near Boynton Beach, Florida on September 10, 2023. (AFP)

On a recent Sunday afternoon, the divers arrived on a thin strip of sand at the furthest, watery edge of New York City. Oxygen tanks strapped to their backs, they waded into the sea and descended into an environment far different from their usual terrestrial surroundings of concrete, traffic and trash-strewn sidewalks.

Horseshoe crabs and other crustaceans crawl on a seabed encrusted with barnacles and colonies of coral. Spiny-finned sea robin, blackfish and wayward angelfish swim in the murky ocean tinted green by sheets of algae.

Not all is pretty. Plastic bottles, candy wrappers and miles and miles of fishing line drift with the tides, endangering sea life.

The undersea litter isn't always visible from the shore. But it has long been a concern of Nicole Zelek, a diving instructor who four years ago launched monthly cleanups at this small cove in the community of Far Rockaway, where New York City meets the Atlantic Ocean, about 4 miles (6.4 kilometers) south of John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens.

A throwaway culture of single-use plastics and other hard-to-degrade material has sullied the world's waters over the decades, posing a danger to marine life such as seals and seabirds. By 2025, some 250 million tons (226.7 million metric tons) of plastic will have found its way into the oceans, according to the PADI AWARE Foundation, a conservation group sponsoring a global project called Dive Against Debris.

Dive by dive, small groups like Zelek's have been trying to undo some of the damage.

“Every month we have a prize for the weirdest find,” she said. They have included the occasional goat skull, perhaps used as part of some ritual, Zelek surmises.

“The best find of all time was an actual ATM machine. Unfortunately, it was empty,” she said.

The divers' haul one late-summer Sunday wasn’t much, but there were clumps and clumps of fishing line untangled from underwater objects. What the divers can’t pull away by hand is cut with scissors.

“Unfortunately, tons of crabs and horseshoe crabs — which are under threat — get tangled in the fishing line and then they die,” Zelek said.

While more ambitious projects are underway to scoop up huge accumulations of floating debris in deeper waters, small-scale coastal cleanups like Zelek's are an important part of the battle against ocean pollution, said Nick Mallos, vice president of conservation for Ocean Conservancy.

“The science is very clear and that’s to tackle our global plastic pollution crisis,” he said. “We have to do it all.”

Every September, the conservancy holds monthlong international coastal cleanups. Since its inception nearly four decades ago, the cleanups have retrieved about 400 million pounds (181.4 million kilograms) of trash from coastal areas around the world.

The best way to combat plastics going into the oceans, Mallos said, is to reduce the globe's dependence on them, particularly in packaging consumer products. But human-powered cleanup is the least costly of all cleanup options.

The Dive Against Debris project invites what organizers call “citizen scientists” to survey their diving sites to help catalog the myriad items that don’t belong in oceans, lakes and other bodies of water. By the group’s count, more than 90,000 participants have conducted more than 21,000 such surveys and removed 2.2 million pieces of junk, big and small.

Zelek and her fellow divers have contributed their finds to the project.

Surface trash might be easy enough to clear with a rake, but the task is more challenging beneath the water. Over the years, the layers of monofilament fishing line have accumulated. And until a few years ago, no one was scooping out the line, hooks and lead weights.

Untangled, a pound of medium-weight fishing filament would stretch to a bit more than 4 miles (6.4 kilometers). It’s anybody’s guess how many miles of fishing line remain on the channel’s bottom.

“Those small things are really what start to accumulate and become a much larger and bigger problem,” said Tanasia Swift, who has been with the group for a year and works for an environmental nonprofit focused on restoring the health of New York City’s waters.

“If there’s anything that we see that doesn’t belong in the water, we take it out,” she said.

While the drivers work, fishermen cast their lines from a ledge where the city's concrete stops. The beach is frequented mostly by residents who live nearby.

Raquel Gonzalez is one such resident, and she's been coming to the beach for years. She and a neighbor brought a rake with them on the same Sunday the divers were there.

“Needs a lot of cleanup here. There's nobody that does any cleanup around here. We have to clean it up ourselves," she said.

“I love this spot, I love the scuba divers," Gonzalez said. “Look at all the good people here.”



Tunisia Court Blocks Closure of Factory Blamed for Pollution

File: One of previous demonstrations demanding halting all activities at the fertilizer factory - EPA
File: One of previous demonstrations demanding halting all activities at the fertilizer factory - EPA
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Tunisia Court Blocks Closure of Factory Blamed for Pollution

File: One of previous demonstrations demanding halting all activities at the fertilizer factory - EPA
File: One of previous demonstrations demanding halting all activities at the fertilizer factory - EPA

A Tunisian court on Thursday rejected demands to suspend operations at a fertilizer factory, a lawyer told AFP, after thousands of protesters blamed the plant for a rise in health problems.

The facility in the city of Gabes emits sulphur gases, nitrogen and fluorine, according to an audit last July for the African Development Bank, which reported "major non-compliance" on air and marine pollution.

Mounir Adouni, head of the Gabes bar association that launched the legal action, said Thursday's decision was an emergency ruling and a final verdict was pending.

"The court ruled that there was no sufficient proof of harm, saying allegations of pollution lacked technical and scientific evidence," Adouni said.

Locals in Gabes have for years rallied against the phosphate-processing factory, which makes fertilisers mainly for export.

The bar association lodged its complaint after thousands protested against the plant in October, blaming it for an increase in health problems in the local community.

This month local campaign group Stop Pollution said 12 of its members had been sentenced to a year in prison over a 2020 protest at the plant.

Adouni said the bar will file an appeal on Friday because no date had been set for a hearing on a final ruling.

Despite a 2017 promise to gradually shut the plant down, authorities last year said they were ramping up production.

Taking advantage of rising prices for fertilizer on global markets, Tunisia now wants its output to increase more than fourfold by 2030.

The African Development Bank last month said it would provide Tunisia with $110 million to "support the environmental upgrading and rehabilitation" of the factory.

President Kais Saied has long vowed to revive Tunisia's phosphate sector, hindered by years of underinvestment and unrest, calling it a "pillar of the national economy".


Barcelona Doubles Tourism Tax to One of Highest in Europe to Fund Housing

Tourists pose for a picture on a balcony of Casa Batllo, designed by architect Antoni Gaudi, at Passeig De Gracia in Barcelona, Spain February 24, 2026. REUTERS/Nacho Doce
Tourists pose for a picture on a balcony of Casa Batllo, designed by architect Antoni Gaudi, at Passeig De Gracia in Barcelona, Spain February 24, 2026. REUTERS/Nacho Doce
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Barcelona Doubles Tourism Tax to One of Highest in Europe to Fund Housing

Tourists pose for a picture on a balcony of Casa Batllo, designed by architect Antoni Gaudi, at Passeig De Gracia in Barcelona, Spain February 24, 2026. REUTERS/Nacho Doce
Tourists pose for a picture on a balcony of Casa Batllo, designed by architect Antoni Gaudi, at Passeig De Gracia in Barcelona, Spain February 24, 2026. REUTERS/Nacho Doce

Tourists in Barcelona could be taxed as much as 15 euros ($17.70) a night after the city raised its tourism fee to one of the highest in Europe on Wednesday as part of efforts to curb visitor numbers and help finance affordable housing.

Authorities in Catalonia have faced increasingly vocal protests from residents about excessive numbers of tourists they say are pushing up housing prices by driving a rise in short-term holiday leaves, said Reuters.

The regional parliament of Catalonia approved a law to double the tax for holiday rental guests to a maximum 12.5 euros per night, up from 6.25 euros, ahead of ‌an already ‌announced plan to ban all short-term rental accommodation by ‌2028.

Hotel ⁠guests will pay ⁠a maximum of between 10 and 15 euros per night from April, up from a current 5 euros to 7.5 euros, depending on the hotel category.

A two-night stay for a couple at one of the four-star hotels that make up nearly half of all hotels in Barcelona could now cost an extra 45.60 euros, as the local authority can charge up to 11.4 ⁠euros per night per person.

Guests at five-star hotels ‌could be charged up to 15 ‌euros a night and cruise passengers will continue to pay around 6 euros.

A quarter ‌of the revenue raised will help address the city's housing crisis, ‌according to the text of the law.

Irene Verrazzo, a 33-year-old nurse from Italy, said Barcelona was already very expensive and she doubted she'd return.

"I don’t think this added expense is fair. They already make money from tourists spending in shops, visiting ‌their monuments, etc.," she said.

The higher tax was unlikely to solve the housing crisis but the hike seemed ⁠reasonable, said 21-year-old ⁠student and local resident Ivan Liu.

Before the tax raise, Barcelona ranked 11th in holiday-rental platform Holidu's 2025 list, behind Amsterdam, where tourists paid the most in Europe at 18.45 euros per day.

Hotel owners are concerned the tax rise could drive away too many of the around 15.8 million tourists who visit Barcelona each year. The city ranks among the top four in the world for conventions, according to the local tourism board, and attendees will not be exempt from the levy.

Manel Casals, general director of Barcelona's hoteliers' group, said proposals to raise the tax gradually to monitor its effects were ignored.

"One day they will kill the goose that lays the golden eggs," he said.


Pakistani Sculptor Turns Scrap into Colossal Metal Artworks

Sculptor Ehtisham Jadoon spray paints a model of Optimus Prime, a film character from Transformers, made from scrap metal at his studio. Farooq NAEEM / AFP
Sculptor Ehtisham Jadoon spray paints a model of Optimus Prime, a film character from Transformers, made from scrap metal at his studio. Farooq NAEEM / AFP
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Pakistani Sculptor Turns Scrap into Colossal Metal Artworks

Sculptor Ehtisham Jadoon spray paints a model of Optimus Prime, a film character from Transformers, made from scrap metal at his studio. Farooq NAEEM / AFP
Sculptor Ehtisham Jadoon spray paints a model of Optimus Prime, a film character from Transformers, made from scrap metal at his studio. Farooq NAEEM / AFP

Sparks fly and metal groans in a cavernous workshop on the outskirts of Islamabad, where Pakistani artist Ehtisham Jadoon fuses discarded car parts into colossal pieces inspired by "Transformers" movies and dinosaurs.

The 35-year-old sculptor's studio brims with cogs, chains, hubcaps and engine parts as his hulking creations -- a lion with a mane of twisted steel, a giant Tyrannosaurus rex and a towering Optimus Prime -- take shape.

"I have always been fascinated by metal objects," Jadoon told AFP after assembling the 14-foot (4-metre) "Transformers" character, his biggest creation yet.

"When I see metals in scrap, I imagine forms in which it could be utilized."

It took Jadoon and his team months of welding and warping to fashion his Optimus Prime, with over 90 percent of its parts sourced from discarded vehicle pieces.

The arms are forged from motorbike springs and gears, its shoulders are curve from car rims, the spine is molded from a fuel tank and its knees are pieced together with chains and suspension parts.

Even its piercing eyes are crafted from vehicle bearings, completing a sculpture that is both intricate and awesome.

"Whenever I see an object, I visualize a form," Jadoon said.

"I could imagine a block transforming into a shape, so I simply solve the puzzle and bring it to life."

- 'Waste becomes valuable' -

Jadoon, a former martial artist who once worked in the steel fabrication business, has never formally studied art. He designs his gargantuan models spontaneously while working.

He told AFP he has to visit a doctor almost every week due to sparks affecting his eyes and burns on his hands and arms, yet he insists this is the only work in which he can channel the energy of his training as a fighter.

Jadoon's work primarily focuses on crafting giants, beasts and powerful forms, which he describes as a reflection of aggression.

"Setting the anatomy and proportions requires visualization from multiple angles and repeated adjustments," he said.

Every week, Jadoon tours scrapyards in Islamabad, sifting through tons of discarded metal in search of pieces that fit into his imagination and then become sculptures.

"What is waste to us became something valuable in his hands," scrapyard owner Bostan Khan told AFP.

"It's incredible to witness."