World Environment Day: Planet is being ‘swamped’ by plastic waste, says UN chief | The Independent
‘Beat Plastic Pollution’, the theme for World Environment Day 2018 - Times of India
Kenya celebrates World Environment Day 2018 by putting measures to beat plastic pollution :: KTN News - The Standard
And World Ocean Day:
World Oceans Day: Big expansion of UK's 'blue belt' to curb plastic pollution - Sky News
#WorldOceansDay: Mediterranean could become a 'sea of plastic' | News | Al Jazeera
On World Oceans Day, Attenborough Shares Serious But Hopeful Message
Both highlighted plastic as the issue - as covered graphically by the Guardian today:
The week in plastic - in pictures
This week marked World Environment day and World Ocean day, both of which highlighted plastic global pollution as the most urgent problem facing our planet. So as a parody of our popular Week in wildlife gallery, from dead pelicans to trapped turtles and garbage-eating cows, we bring you ... the Week in plastic.
Plastic bags arrive at their breeding ground of Juhu Beach, Mumbai, India. Today we produce about 300m tonnes of plastic every year - nearly equivalent to the weight of the entire human population.Photograph: Subhash Sharma/Zuma/Alamy
Animals graze on nutritious plastic rubbish in New Delhi, India. Figures show India has the world’s 14 most plastic-polluted cities.Photograph: Rajat Gupta/EPA
Birds search for plastic delicacies at a landfill site in Aceh, Indonesia. Only 9% of all plastic waste ever produced has been recycled. About 12% has been incinerated, while the rest - 79% - has accumulated in landfills, dumps or the natural environment.Photograph: Fachrul Reza/Barcroft Images
A crab searches for a lovely new home among the plastic waste on a beach in Lima, Peru, on World Environment day, 5 June 2018. The UN urged steps against the use of plastic bags, as part of a global challenge to reduce the increasing pollution of the oceans.Photograph: Ernesto Benavides/AFP/Getty Images
Mbale, Uganda. An officer at the Uganda Wildlife Education Centre displays a tortoise whose shell was deformed after it was rescued from some plastic string. Many animals hope that plastic mutilation will make them more attractive during mating season.Photograph: Daniel Edyegu/Xinhua/Alamy Stock Photo
A swan and a mallard duck play hide and seek among rubbish in the river Thames in Limehouse, London.Photograph: Nigel Bowles/Alamy
Gulls love to nest in plastic waste at a landfill site in Cape Town, South Africa. According to an Ellen MacArthur Foundation report, there will be more plastic in the ocean than fish by 2050. Africa is one of the most affected continents due to its extensive coastline and underdeveloped waste systems that allow plastic waste to easily enter the ocean.Photograph: Nic Bothma/EPA
A mangrove shoot thrives amid the plastic in Jakarta, Indonesia. Indonesia has been ranked the second biggest marine polluter in the world behind only China, with reports showing that the country produces 187.2m tonnes of plastic waste each year. This week,the government announced it will join forces with the country’s two largest Islamic organisations, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and Muhammadiyah, using their extensive networks across the world’s largest Muslim-majority nation to encourage consumers to reduce plastic waste and reuse their plastic bags.Photograph: Ed Wray/Getty Images
Decorative plastic waste washed ashore on the coast near Shanghai. About 8m tonnes of plastic waste is dumped into the world’s oceans every year - the equivalent of one truck of plastic being tipped into the sea every minute, every day. More than half comes from five Asian countries: China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam, according to a 2015 study.Photograph: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images
A woman walks through a stunning plastic forest that was created by rising floodwater south of Hanoi.Photograph: Nhac Nguyen/AFP/Getty Images
A dead pelican lies in the rubbish of the Tarcoles river, Costa Rice, one of the most polluted basins in Central America.Photograph: Jeffrey Arguedas/EPA
A gannet carries some tasty plastic food back to its nest.Photograph: Graham Moore/Alamy
A cow models a plastic head decoration for cattle in New Delhi. India will eliminate all single-use plastic in the country by 2022, the prime minister, Narendra Modi, announced this week.Photograph: Rajat Gupta/EPA
Plastic bottles will soon be appearing alongside cod and haddock on chip shop menus, it is hoped. About 10% of the volume of each fish haul caught is plastic waste.Photograph: Laura Lezza/Getty Images
This turtle is having fun playing in discarded plastic netting which prevents it from reaching the surface and breathing. A loggerhead turtle trapped in a drifting abandoned net, Mediterranean Sea.Photograph: Jordi Chias/NPL/WWF
This stag is hoping to attract a suitable mate with its impressive plastic horn adornment.Photograph: SNH/PA
This whale’s tasty plastic feast ended in disaster when it swallowed up to 80 plastic bags and died.Photograph: Department of Marine and Coastal Resources/Reuters
A dog enjoys the view at Kibarani dump site in Mombasa, Kenya. A year after Kenya announced the world’s toughest ban on plastic bags, and eight months after it was introduced, the authorities are claiming victory.Photograph: Andrew Kasuku/AFP/Getty Images
Beautiful plastics pebbles adorn a beach in Indonesia.Photograph: Hotli Simanjuntak/EPA
There were celebrations this week when it was revealed that plastics had finally reached the world’s last great wilderness of Antarctica.Photograph: Christian Aslund/Greenpeace/PA
This grey mullet in Hong Kong is thrilled to find microplastics in its habitat.Photograph: Bobby Yip/Reuters
The week in plastic - in pictures | Environment | The Guardian
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