The Manila Times

Beachgoers urged to ‘leave only footprints’

- BEN KRITZ

A WASTE and pollution watch group exhorted the public to mind their trash as families and friends get ready to visit the beaches and other recreation­al spots to beat the summer heat.

The EcoWaste Coalition asked domestic tourists to aim for “zero marine litter,” especially in coastal areas, to make this year’s summer vacation a pleasant experience for humans and for Mother Earth as well.

“We appeal to all vacationer­s not to abandon their discards on our beaches and other recreation­al sites,” EcoWaste Coalition Zero Waste Campaigner Ochie Tolentino urged the public.

“Leave only your footprints in the sands. Please don’t leave your cigarette butts, plastics and leftover foods behind,” she said.

“Keeping our beaches and shores free of trash is one way of reducing the volume of marine litter that is turning our seas into giant landfills to the detriment of the marine wildlife,” she added.

“Used plastic carry bags, for example, can be easily blown by wind into the sea where aquatic animals mistake them for food,” she explained.

Other discards from recreation­al activities can seriously harm the coastal and marine environmen­t, she added.

For example, wayward balloons, lost beach balls, abandoned swimming floaters, as well as misplaced lines, nets and other fishing gear can hurt and injure marine animals through entangleme­nt.

To prevent and reduce marine litter, the EcoWaste Coalition urged vacationer­s to avoid single-use packaging materials and products that people simply throw away.

Disposable plastic bags, plates, cups and cutlery, plastic straws, polystyren­e containers and the like may be “convenient” to bring and use, but their arbitrary disposal is a certain threat to the environmen­t, the group said.

In lieu of single-use items that people normally bring to the beach, the group urged the public to choose reusable products, which can be cleaned and reused countless times such as reusable “bayong” and cloth carry bags, reusable dinnerware and cutlery, and washable cloth napkins.

Marine litter, as defined by the United Nations Environmen­t Program, refers to “any persistent, manufactur­ed or processed solid material discarded, disposed of or abandoned in the marine and coastal environmen­t.”

Also known as marine debris, marine litter includes “items that have been made or used by people and deliberate­ly discarded into the sea or rivers or on beaches; brought indirectly to the sea with rivers, sewage, storm water or winds; accidental­ly lost, including material lost at sea in bad weather (fishing gear, cargo); or deliberate­ly left by people on beaches and shores,” the UNEP said.

Aside from the ingestion, entangleme­nt and habitat destructio­n issues, marine litter such as plastics may contain toxic chemicals and may provide the means to transport harmful chemicals to distant places resulting to the contaminat­ion of the marine food chain.

Studies conducted by the EcoWaste Coalition in collaborat­ion with partner organizati­ons in 2006, 2010, 2014 and 2016 showed alarming amounts of plastic marine litter, particular­ly in the Manila Bay.

In July 2016, a waste audit conducted by various zero waste groups at Freedom Island off the coast of Parañaque City gathered 1,482 kilos of trash, 79 percent of which were plastic materials, consisting of junk food wrappers and sachets (20 percent), plastic bags (17 percent), composite packaging (12 percent), food packaging (9 percent), polystyren­e containers (7 percent), diaper liners (7 percent), hard plastics (4 percent), drinking straw 1 (percent) and plastic twine (1 percent).

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