Wednesday, 1 November 2017

"Stop plastic pollution in our oceans" >>> Surfers Against Sewage bring their campaign to Devon

The Surfers Against Sewage campaign group have petitioned Parliament:
Futures Forum: "Bring back bottle deposits to stop plastic pollution in our oceans" >>> Surfers Against Sewage to deliver petition to Parliament tomorrow

They are now bringing their campaign to create 'plastic-free coastlines' to the County Council:


Council urged to ban throw-away plastic bottles

Devon invited to join Plastic Free Coastlines campaign

Keith Rossiter
1 NOV 2017



AN ISLAND OF PLASTIC IS THREATENING OUR LIVES

Devon County Council is being pushed to ban from its premises all plastic items that are used once and then discarded. A motion to be considered by the Cabinet next week calls on the county to support the Surfers Against Sewage campaign Plastic Free Coastlines.

The council should commit to plastic free alternatives and support plastic free initiatives in Devon, its author, Cllr Frank Biederman, says. He urges the council to lead by example by removing single-use plastic items from its premises.

Also it must encourage plastic-free initiatives, promoting the campaign and supporting its events.

A representative of Devon County Council will become a member of the Plastic Free Coastlines steering group if the county supports the motion.

It is estimated that up to 13 million tonnes of plastic leak into the global marine environment every year. Some of it escapes from waste management systems, and some is thrown away deliberately.



A 10-metre long whale is unveiled by Sky Ocean Rescue at Potters Fields Park in London. (Image: Matt Alexander/PA Wire)

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Plastic items kill wildlife by entangling or suffocating them, and are responsible for the death of more than a million sea birds and mammals every year. But the plastics go on killing. They break down into microplastics, getting into the food chain and eventually ending up on our own plates, with potential to harm human health. The microplastics do not degrade further, and can remain in the environment for hundreds of years.

The direct economic costs of marine litter to maritime industries, the cost of clean-up and on tourism in the UK are estimated at £103million a year.

The government has introduced a levy on plastic bags, and microbeads will be banned from most cosmetics from June next year.



An exfoliating daily wash containing micro-beads

But these two sources make up just 2% of the problem.

A third of marine plastic litter is single-use drinks containers.

A widespread source of polltion is nurdles – plastic granules which are shipped around the world as the raw product in plastics factories.

Devon County Council has already made strides in reducing plastics use. A switch away from desktop printers has cut the number of printer cartridges bought by the council more than 9,000 in 2009 to 500 in 2016. 10,000 fewer disposable cups have been used for hot drinks in its first 6 months after the introduction of a reusable cup.

Council urged to ban throw-away plastic bottles - Devon Live

This is all part of the bigger national picture:
Futures Forum: Marine ecosystems and human health > UK to ban microbeads
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