Environmental officials in Australia still haven’t completely solved the mystery of black balls found littering popular beaches on the country’s eastern coastline, but they’re getting closer. The New South Wales Environmental Protection Authority said Wednesday that the composition of the mysterious globs had been determined — and it’s not pretty — but their origin remains unclear.
The golf-to-baseball sized balls — the appearance of hundreds of which forced the closure of two beaches near Sydney last month — are not, the agency said, tar balls as initially suspected. Or at least not simple tar balls from oil out at sea.
They’re more likely to be sewage-trash balls.
According to the EPA’s analysis, “the balls comprised fatty acids, petroleum hydrocarbons, and other organic and inorganic materials.” In plain English, that means a mix of cooking oils and fats, cleaning and skincare products, hair, food waste, oil and gas and any number of other things that people routinely flush, dump or wash down drains and storm grates.
“The investigation has revealed that the balls contain hundreds to thousands of different materials, including human hair and various fibres, indicating they likely originated from a source that releases mixed waste,” the agency concluded.
But officials still couldn’t say where the mix of materials came from.
The EPA said it looked at “several possible causes, such as a shipping spill or wastewater outflow,” but that due to “the complex composition of the balls and the time they have spent in the water, testing has not been able to confirm their exact origin.”
It said the regional water company, Sydney Water, reported “no issues with the operation or maintenance” at two nearby treatment facilities when asked soon after the balls appeared. A review of data by the state maritime meteorological agency yielded “nothing conclusive” about where they might have washed up from.
While the EPA said it was waiting for the final results of its tests on the mystery balls, the agency has separately been pushing for greater efforts to clean up the Sydney area, which it warned was quickly filling up with…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Home – CBSNews.com…