Environmental activists in Bosnia are warning that tons of rubbish floating down the Balkan country’s rivers are endangering the local ecosystem and people’s health.

The River Drina, located on the border between Bosnia and Serbia, has been covered for weeks with rubbish that has piled up faster than the authorities can clear it out.

Weeks of wet winter weather that swelled the Drina and its tributaries pulled plastic bottles, rusty barrels, used tyres, old furniture and other rubbish into the water.

Near the eastern Bosnian town of Visegrad, islands of rubbish can be seen floating on the emerald-coloured water as they advance towards the dam of the local hydroelectric power plant.

Bosnia river waste
A machine collects rubbish floating in the Drina in Bosnia (Kemal Softic/AP)

Activists say the situation is similar for miles up and downstream from Visegrad.

“This is a problem of huge proportions,” warned Dejan Furtula of a local environmental group. “I am appealing to all institutions and everyone who can help to join the (clearing) process.”

Local authorities have been working to remove the waste, but more rubbish is constantly arriving from upstream, carried also by the Drina’s tributaries in Serbia and Montenegro. The waste eventually piles up by the Visegrad dam. The 215 mile-long Drina later flows into the Sava River.

Mr Furtula said that micro plastics and toxins from the rubbish end up in the food chain, threatening both wildlife and humans.

“The entire ecosystem is in danger,” he said. “We all eat fish here.”

Bosnia river waste
Environmental activists in Bosnia said the waste is endangering the local ecosystem and people’s health (Kemal Softic/AP)

Waste management is a problem in many Balkans nations, where the economies are struggling and environmental issues often come last, after efforts to step up employment and industry production. Serbia recently faced a similar waste-clogging emergency.

The Drina clearing effort in Bosnia received a boost this week from a start-up based in Germany that brought in a rubbish-picking vessel dubbed Collectix.

Everwave co-founder Clemens Feigl said “shocking” images of the rubbish-covered river motivated the company to help.

“We will try in the next days to get as much waste as possible out of the water,” he said. “We will be in action for the next 14 days and will give it our everything.”

In addition to river pollution, many countries in the Western Balkans have other environmental woes. One of the most pressing is the extremely high air pollution affecting a number of cities in the region.