FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (Feb. 18) - A mile offshore from
this city's high-rise condos and beachside bars, where glitz and glamour mix
with spring break revelry, lies an underwater dump - up to 2 million old tires
strewn across the ocean floor.
'They're a Destruction Machine'
A well-intentioned attempt in 1972 to create what was
touted as the world's largest artificial reef made of tires has become an
ecological disaster.
The idea was simple: Create new marine habitat and
alternate dive sites to relieve pressure on natural reefs, while disposing of
tires that were clogging landfills.
Decades later it's clear the plan
failed miserably.
Little sea life has formed on the tires. Some of the
bundles bound together with nylon and steel have broken loose and are scouring
the ocean floor across a swath the size of 31 football fields. Tires are washing
up on beaches. Thousands have wedged up against the nearby natural reef some 70
feet below the sea surface, blocking coral growth and devastating marine life.
Similar problems have been reported at tire reefs worldwide.
"They're a
constantly killing coral destruction machine," said William Nuckols, coordinator
for Coastal America, a federal group involved in organizing a cleanup effort
that includes Broward County biologists, state scientists and Army and Navy
salvage divers.
Gov. Charlie Crist's proposed budget includes $2 million
to help to dispose of the tires. Broward County will manage the work onsite, and
military divers will use the effort as part of their annual training missions at
no cost to Florida.
A monthlong pilot project is set for June. The
full-scale salvage operation is expected to run through 2010 at a cost to the
state of about $3.4 million.
"The size of the salvage job has just been
way too massive and expensive for county and state government to handle alone,"
Nuckols said.
Ray McAllister, a professor of ocean engineering at Florida
Atlantic University, was instrumental in organizing the 1970s tire reef project
with the approval of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
McAllister helped
found Broward Artificial Reef Inc., which got tires from Goodyear and organized
hundreds of volunteers with boats and barges. A Goodyear blimp even dropped a
gold-painted tire into the ocean at the site to commemorate the start. It's
unclear how much it cost to build the reef, but McAllister said his group raised
several thousand dollars. The county also chipped in, and Goodyear donated
equipment to bind and compress the tires.
A 1972 Goodyear news release
proclaimed the reef would "provide a haven for fish and other aquatic species,"
and noted the "excellent properties of scrap tires as reef
material."
"The really good idea was to provide habitat for marine
critters so we could double or triple marine life in the area," McAllister said.
"It just didn't work that way. I look back now and see it was a bad
idea."
In decades past, tire reefs were created off coastal
states and around the world from Australia to Africa.
"We've literally
dumped millions of tires in our oceans," said Jack Sobel, a senior Ocean
Conservancy scientist. "I believe that people who were behind the artificial
tire reef promotions actually were well intentioned and thought they were doing
the right thing. In hindsight, we now realize that we made a mistake."
No
one can say with certainty why the idea doesn't work, but one problem is that,
unlike large ships that have been sunk for reefs, tires are too light. They can
be swept away with tides and currents from powerful storms, and marine life
doesn't have a chance to attach. Some scientists also believe the rubber leeches
toxins.
Virginia tried it several decades ago but Hurricane Bonnie, which
hit the coast as a Category 3 storm in 1998, ripped the tires loose, sending
them on a slow march south. They eventually littered some North Carolina
beaches.
New Jersey scientists thought they had a solution to the weight
problem - in 1986, the state began a small reef project with about 1,000 tires
split in half, bound together and weighted with concrete.
It didn't work.
Pieces of rubber broke loose and floated free.
"We had to go up and down
the coast of New Jersey and collect 50 to 100 of those pieces that were all
along the beaches," said Hugh Carberry of New Jersey's Department of
Environmental Protection.
The state then hatched a new plan to stack tires
10-high and fill the cylindrical centers with concrete. Each bundle weighed
about a ton.
While they stayed in place, scientists soon learned it was
cheaper and more effective to make the reefs out of concrete balls because the
tires didn't have enough surface area for marine life to
attach.
Indonesia and Malaysia mounted enormous tire reef programs back
in the 1980s and are just now seeing the ramifications from littered beaches to
reef destruction, Sobel said.
Most states have since stopped using tires
to create reefs but they continue to wash up worldwide. In 2005, volunteers for
the Ocean Conservancy's annual international coastal cleanup removed more than
11,000 tires from beaches.
The tires retrieved from the waters off Fort
Lauderdale will be chipped for use in road projects and burned for fuel, among
other reuses, as part of Florida's overall aggressive tire disposal program,
said Michael Sole, chief of the state's Department of Environmental
Protection.
"It's going to be a huge job bringing them all up," Sole
said. "It's vigorous work. You have to dig the tires out of the
sand."
Broward County marine biologist Kenneth Banks said the tires have
degraded little, still bearing raised writing and whitewalls. They were dumped
on sandy bottom between two natural reefs running parallel to shore. The biggest
problem now is the loose tires gathered along the backside of the inner
reef.
"If you look there now on the lower reef face there's two or three
tires deep and nothing under it. Things just can't live there," Banks said.
"It's hard to dive anywhere out there without seeing tires. It's really
overwhelming ... like a landfill."
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. The information contained
in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise
distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All
active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.