Jamaica Gleaner

NEPA, UDC to partner for Coastal Clean-up Day

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THE NATIONAL Environmen­t and Planning Agency (NEPA) will be partnering with the Urban Developmen­t Corporatio­n (UDC) in its beach clean-up exercises at select locations across the island as part of activities for Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-Up Day on Saturday, September 16.

The select areas are Half Moon Bay in Hellshire, St Catherine; the Portland Bight Protected Area; and locations in Negril.

Internatio­nal Coastal Clean-Up Day is a global event initiated by Ocean Conservanc­y (OC) in 1986. Its aim is to engage citizens to remove trash and debris from beaches and waterways all around the world, identify the sources of debris, and change the behavioura­l patterns that contribute to pollution.

NEPA’s clean-up exercise is one of hundreds of projects registered islandwide for the day. The overall activities are being coordinate­d by the Jamaica Environmen­t Trust (JET), with support from several organisati­ons and entities.

Public relations officer at NEPA, Deleen Powell, said that the clean-up day is to highlight the issue of improper disposal of solid waste and to indicate that marine litter is a serious problem around the world and in Jamaica, affecting not only the beaches, but also the birds and marine animals that use the ocean.

“A very big part of coastal clean-up day is not just removing garbage but also about collecting the informatio­n related to the type of garbage ... so we ask that persons complete the data sheets provided and record the types of garbage that they are collecting and how much garbage. Once that is done, it will help us to get a better picture of the kinds of non-biodegrada­ble items that we are finding along our coastline,” Powell said.

She added that this informatio­n will allow the agency to have a better understand­ing of the consumptio­n and disposal practices of persons, and based on the data, policies can be crafted to address the problem of solid waste.

Powell noted that the annual clean-up exercise is one of the agency’s main publiceduc­ation thrusts as the team uses the day to talk with students, corporate Jamaica, the community, the police, and various civil society groups about the growing problem of garbage and waste disposal in Jamaica.

“We do not want people to just come in and clean up the beach on that day and then forget about the issue. We want it to continue year-round.”

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