The small rubber balls are being washed ashore en masse (Picture: Tees Valley Wildlife Trust/SWNS)
Thousands of bizarre blue balls have been found washed up on UK beaches.
More than 1,000 of the mysterious rubber-type balls have been found on the shores in the Tees Valley over the last four days.
According to experts at Tees Valley Wildlife Trust, the balls originate from Hartlepool power station, which use the abrasive spheres to clean the systemās pipes.
Dubbed āTaprogge ballsā after their manufacturer, the balls are rarely released into the sea, but sometimes need to be dumped if there is a sudden build-up of pressure.
Locals say recent storms may have disrupted a large gathering of the balls on the sea bed, launching them back onto the shores.
Some of the blue rubber balls that have been found along beaches in the Tees Valley in the last four days (Picture: Tees Valley Wildlife Trust /SWNS)
EDF, which operates the power station, claim there hasnāt been a release recently, leading many to suspect strong winds and currents are to blame.
While the balls are biodegradable, it takes two years for them to completely degrade, posing a threat to local wildlife.
Wilder Coast officer Jacky Watson from Tees Valley Wildlife Trust said: āMy aim of the project is to get people to do what they can do to help stop pollution in the sea.
āThe little blue balls are made of natural rubber, theyāre used to scrub the pipes of the Hartlepool power station in the cooling system.
āThe cooling system uses sea water and they have to blast the pipes to remove sea creatures.
āThey do this every week, they go through with the balls. Itās a closed system and the balls shouldnāt escape. Now and then thereās an incident and they do escape. If thereās too much pressure they get released, and they go into the river and the sea.
Locals are being asked to report any findings (Picture: Tees Valley Wildlife Trust /SWNS)
āThey are natural and will biodegrade but are still a hazard. Theyāre supposed to biodegrade in two years, but itās still a long time.
āWeāve got a very old nuclear power station, itās around 40 years old.
āWe still want to do something about it, along with a lot of beach cleaning groups along the coast. Theyāve been picking them up.
āI contacted EDF and I found their environmental compliance manager was interested in talking to us.ā
Jacky and her team have been asking the public for their help, using the locations of ball discoveries to pinpoint their movement on a map.
Jacky added: āWe put the word out locally if people found the balls, they could let us know and EDF with the what3words app.
āWhat they didnāt realise is how far south theyāre going. Thereās a nice map now to understand where the current is depositing the balls.
āIāve had reports of over 1,000 balls from just these last few days.
āThe last few days the storm has disturbed a deposit of balls on the seabed somewhere.
āWe think theyāve been brought up all together. They think theyāre historic. If balls are released it is very serious.
āThere were some releases about a year ago and there was a detailed report done.
āTheyāre found in small numbers on a regular basis, mainly one or two. The community have got involved, people really get into it.
āOver the last few days itās gone nuclear.ā
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The public are being asked to report any sightings of the rubber balls on the coastline.Ā