Daily Dispatch

NAHOON BEACH HAS SOME OF WORST PLASTIC POLLUTION IN COUNTRY

There are immediate steps that could make a significan­t difference

- TED KEENAN

Local sewage outlets, river flotsam and swirling currents all add up to a mountain of plastic beginning to coat the city’s most famous beach.

The world’s throwaway attitude to plastic has nasty repercussi­ons for East London’s Nahoon beach.

According to EL Museum scientist Kevin Cole, research shows its plastic pollution is among the worst on the SA coastline.

Producers make 80 000 tons of plastic annually but only a fraction of this is recycled. The rest goes into the oceans, often eaten by marine life.

“Studies by UCT’s Professor Peter Ryanshow Nahoon is one of the hardest hit. The cause is lack of compliance and law enforcemen­t,” said Cole.

There is no single solution to the problem. But there are immediate steps that Cole believes will make a significan­t difference. He says if Valli Moosa, minister of environmen­t affairs in the 1990s, was still in charge, grocers flirting with changing plastic shopping bags for more eco-friendly ones would have compliance deadlines. Delay tactics and promises of “planning, beginning, working towards, researchin­g, and studying” would end.

“A total ban on plastic bags will ensure shoppers use their own or paper bags. Eventually, they might refuse to buy products heavily wrapped in plastic, as is happening in many countries,” said Cole.

He urges a full ban on singleuse plastic. A plastic bottle takes 450 years to decompose, as do disposable diapers. Fishing line takes 600 years.

Paper, cardboard, and newspaper decompose in between two and eight weeks.

Throughout the first world massive corporatio­ns, amongst Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Unilever, Nestle, L’Oréal, and locally Spar and Woolworths, set dates to eliminate single-use plastic, but seldom stick to deadlines.

The common excuse is that prices would soar, penalising their customers, a view backed by the European Commission.

Countering this, the World Economic Forum reckons recycling would save $8-billion annually. The biggest PR budget usually wins the argument.

Jonathan Earl, a director of waste management and recycling company Collectall, agrees with Cole’s views.

Earl was involved with the East London Mercedes-Benz plant’s ISO 14 000 waste management system in the early 2000s. The parent company was implementi­ng the system internatio­nally.

The budget was substantia­l, the goals clearly identified and communicat­ed, and commitment from senior directors intense. Getting the message through the ranks, from management to worker level, was simply considered part of the manufactur­ing job, and people embraced it.

Once the plant was compliant, the system moved down to suppliers. Their contracts depended on sticking to rules, and deviations were not tolerated.

“If a manufactur­ing plant can get this right, there is no reason that East London shouldn’t. Step one is communicat­ion, getting people on board.”

Cole’s view on plastic noncomplia­nce harks back nearly 70 years to the tobacco industry when doctors in the UK proved that smoking led to lung cancer. Yet the industry denied it, and many tobacco executives perjured themselves fighting laws curbing lighting up.

Despite all the adverts and warnings, more Americans still die from cigarette-induced illnesses than due to murder, AIDS, suicide, drugs, car crashes or alcohol abuse.

People don’t die, not directly anyway, from plastic pollution – or not yet anyway. Cole says this will change as marine life ingests more plastic, and humans eat more marine life.

“Single-use plastic – bottles, earbuds, polystyren­e cups, confection­ery, straws, food wrapping – is washed into our rivers. Antiquated sewerage systems just can’t cope, and it is released, untreated into the sea. Fixing that is the ultimate goal, but banning bags is the first step.”

Plastic-chomping bacteria – along with decomposab­le plastic, awareness, and compliance, might return Nahoon into a pristine beach, and not a plastic dump. If we all do our best.

A total ban on shopping plastic bags will ensure shoppers use their own or more expensive paper bags

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 ?? Picture: ALAN EASON ?? LETHAL LITTER: Nahoon beach has one of the highest incidences of plastic pollution on the South African coastline. Earlier this year a cleanup campaign was organised by surfer and environmen­tal educator Dean Knox along the Nahoon stretch.
Picture: ALAN EASON LETHAL LITTER: Nahoon beach has one of the highest incidences of plastic pollution on the South African coastline. Earlier this year a cleanup campaign was organised by surfer and environmen­tal educator Dean Knox along the Nahoon stretch.
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