Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Recycling plastic waste into savvy business venture

- NADA FARHOUD

Plastic rain is the new acid rain, Craig Bennett, the head of The Wildlife Trusts has warned, as microplast­ics from the sea are polluting our soil. Tiny particles of plastic, from bottles and other waste, are degrading to microplast­ics in the oceans and then rising into clouds as water vapour before falling as rain. He said that the world is not yet taking the plastic crisis seriously, and if we do not stop using the material we will see implicatio­ns for human health.

THERE are as many as 5,000 items of plastic pollution per mile on our beloved British beaches.

While some bottles and wrappers have been mindlessly left behind or blown out of nearby bins, a vast majority of the plastic choking our seas has entered from rivers.

Surfers Against Sewage has launched what it says will be the UK’S biggest ever beach clean, as part of efforts to tackle the threat of plastic pollution to marine wildlife.

The charity hopes to inspire 100,000 people to clean up their local beach, river, street or green spaces, to clear a million miles by the end of 2021, as part of a new “million-mile clean” environmen­tal campaign.

After attending a clean-up event for World Rivers Day, Flora Blathwayt was shocked to see the amount of rubbish being washed up on the shores of the Thames. Now the 34-year-old, who was furloughed in May last year, has turned her hobby from trash into cash – leading to the start of Washed Up Cards, a small business born in the pandemic.

She said: “I decided to make my sister, who for a long time has been living plastic free, a card using bits of plastic for her wedding.

“I had so much fun making it that I started sending more for friends and family.

“But it wasn’t until lockdown started and I was furloughed that I started running more along the Thames, and found myself cleaning the beach and finding more ‘jewels’, when I realised I could turn this into a proper venture.”

She sells cards for all occasions with each having a different bit of river plastic incorporat­ed into the hand-drawn design on recycled cards. Flora also reuses packaging such as the wrap that surrounds toilet paper.

“I’m not perfect with plastic, but if everyone does a bit more that does count for a lot,” Flora said.

Customers include actor Hugh Bonneville and those from as far away as Florida. Some have also messaged to say her cards have inspired them to start a local clean-up, while Selfridges now plan to sell the cards in its stores.

For more informatio­n go to: instagram. com/washedupca­rds

‘‘ Each card has a different bit of river plastic in the handdrawn design

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POLLUTION Bournemout­h beach

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