2012 San Francisco Bay Coastal Cleanup from multiple nurdle spills. In
Hong Kong, after being blown by
Typhoon Vicente on 24 July 2012, some containers belonging to Chinese oil giant
Sinopec which were carrying over 150 tonnes of plastic pellets were blown into the sea, washing up on southern Hong Kong coasts, such as
Shek O,
Cheung Chau,
Ma Wan and
Lamma Island. Though nurdles are not toxic or hazardous on their own according to Sinopec, the spill disrupted marine life and is being credited with killing stocks of fish on fish farms.
2017 A nurdle spill of about two billion nurdles (49 tons) from a
shipping container in
Durban Harbor required extended cleanup efforts. These nurdles have also been spotted washing up on the shore in
Western Australia. The Great Nurdle Hunt, which occurred June 2–5, 2017, across the United Kingdom drew attention to the issue of plastic pellet pollution. A program started by Fidra, a Scottish environmental charity, sourced information on nurdles from citizens across the region using shared photos to better understand the makeup of pollution across beaches in the UK. The nurdle hunts occurring earlier in 2017 determined that 73% of UK beaches had nurdle pollution.
2018 A semi-truck crash led to the release of bright blue colored nurdles into
Pocono Creek and the waterways of the
Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania.
2019 In January of 2019 the container vessel
MSC Zoe lost more than 300 containers in the North Sea, leading to pollution of nearby islands, including pollution by plastic pellets.
2020 On February 23, 2020, the Trans Carrier ship, traveling from Rotterdam (Netherlands) to Stavanger (Norway), encountered severe weather conditions off the Danish coast. As a result, a container carrying polypropylene pellets sustained damage. Approximately 13.2 tonnes of nurdles, out of the 26 tonnes originally aboard the Trans Carrier at the time of the incident, were released into the North Sea. This spill led to contamination in the Oslo Fjord and along the Swedish west coast, impacting about 700 coastal sites. During a thunderstorm on August 20, a shipping container with 25 tons of nurdles arriving from Asia fell off the CMA CGM Bianca ship into the
Mississippi River in New Orleans. No official clean up took place. Hazardous material spills are in coast guard jurisdiction, but nurdles are not classified as hazardous material. The Department of Environmental Quality does not find it clear as to who is responsible for cleaning up the spill.
2021 On 2 June 2021 the cargo ship sank off the coast of
Sri Lanka, spilling chemicals and microplastic nurdles and causing the worst environmental disaster in the country's history.
2023 In January 2023, the French government announced it will be taking legal action against "persons unknown" in response to extensive plastic pellet pollution along the coast of
Brittany that is thought to have originated from shipping containers lost in the Atlantic Ocean. Since December 2023, the coast of
Galicia is facing an environmental crisis due to millions of tiny white plastic balls from the Liberian-flagged ship Toconao, which lost six containers off
Viana do Castelo in
Portugal.
2025 Nurdles were found on the North East coast in
England in March 2025 after a collision between cargo ship
Solong and tanker
Stena Immaculate. ==Current progress and solutions==