Antarctica Crucially Overhauls Flag Into A Cry For Help About Plastic Pollution
By Mikelle Leow, 11 Apr 2024
Video screenshot via Antarctica Flag Redesigned
The pristine white continent of Antarctica, untouched by permanent human habitation, has long been a symbol of peace and scientific exploration. However, this image is undergoing a chilling transformation following the discovery of microplastics in the snow.
A recent initiative by Agenda Antártica, a nonprofit devoted to the environmental preservation of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean, sets to paint a more accurate picture of today’s icescape. For this, it has turned to no other than the Antarctic flag as its poster child. Like the climate, it’s not looking too good.
Established in 2012, Agenda Antártica is at the forefront of Antarctic conservation efforts. The organization promotes policies towards Antarctic conservation from a Latin American perspective, engaging in policy advocacy, political lobbying, stakeholder engagement, civil society awareness, and education.
The original flag, created by vexillologist Graham Bartram in 1996, features a white field with the continent outlined in blue. This simple design, based on the United Nations (UN) flag, also reflected Antarctica’s vast, icy expanse.
There’s no official flag for Antarctica since it doesn’t have a government. But Bartram’s image is probably the most recognizable, so much so that it’s even the one adopted by Apple for the Antarctica flag emoji.
To reflect the existing landscape, the nonprofit enlisted Bartram to rework the snow-blanketed design. This time, the white is swapped out with a field of multicolored dots, symbolizing the growing threat of microplastics (plastics no larger than five millimeters) polluting the continent.
Video screenshots via Antarctica Flag Redesigned
The specks take on the real shapes of plastics found across the land, creating a snapshot of the litter on Antarctic snow.
Image via Antarctica Flag Redesigned
“Plastic is destroying Antarctica. It’s everywhere,” Bartram details in a video. “It’s not a clean white color anymore. That’s why I decided to update the flag.”
This stark change is a wake-up call, underscored by research conducted by the University of Canterbury in New Zealand. The groundbreaking study, published in 2022 in the journal The Cryosphere, found microplastics in freshly fallen Antarctic snow—contaminating fish, birds, and even seawater— for the first time.
Video screenshot via Antarctica Flag Redesigned
The University of Canterbury team, led by PhD student Alex Aves, collected snow samples from across the Ross Ice Shelf. Shockingly, microplastic particles were present in all 19 samples analyzed, even in remote locations far from research stations. The concentration was even higher than previously reported levels in the surrounding Ross Sea and sea ice. This suggests widespread contamination, likely caused by microplastics traveling long distances through the air or originating from human activity on the continent.
Agenda Antártica’s redesigned flag, echoing these worrying findings, serves as a potent symbol of the human impact on Antarctica's delicate ecosystem. The fight against plastic pollution is a global one, and the spotless white continent serves as a stark reminder of the consequences of inaction.
More than a visual representation, it’s a rallying cry. Agenda Antártica is using the reimagined flag to raise awareness and garner support for a strong Global Plastics Treaty. This pact, currently under negotiation at the UN, aims to limit plastic production, bolster recycling infrastructure, and reduce single-use plastics.
[via Little Black Book and Fast Company, video and images via Antarctica Flag Redesigned]