Scottish Daily Mail

Mystery of plastic pellets blighting beauty spot beach

- By Miles Dilworth

THOUSANDS of plastic pellets have mysterious­ly washed up on a beach.

The nurdles, which are processed to make everything from plastic bottles to bin liners, have been found on Hayling Island, Hampshire.

Volunteers have been left baffled by their appearance, with some speculatin­g that the pellets may have been spilled during manufactur­ing before being washed out to sea.

One volunteer managed to fill a jam-jar with around one thousand in two hours. It is the latest example of the devastatin­g impact plastic waste is having on our marine environmen­t.

‘We’re horrified by what we saw in terms of all of these tiny, tiny plastic nurdles, which are about the size of a lentil and are used in plastic manufactur­ing,’

Lissie Polard of campaign group Final Straw Solent told the BBC. ‘They are everywhere around here, all around the shoreline.’

It came as the BBC last night aired a one-off documentar­y on the scourge of plastic waste.

Drowning In Plastic exposed how plastics have now fully infiltrate­d our ecosystem, entering our bodies from the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the foods we eat.

The Mail has campaigned successful­ly to reduce the damage of plastic on our environmen­t.

Plastic bag usage has declined by 86 per cent since this newspaper lobbied successful­ly for the introducti­on of a 5p levy, which was brought in in 2015. The Mail has also campaigned successful­ly for a ban on plastic microbeads blamed for damaging our oceans, and is now pushing for wider action against all throwaway plastic such as straws, cuttlery and coffee cups.

Last week Tesco announced it would be trying out reverse vending machines ahead of Government plans for a deposit scheme on plastic bottles.

The move marked another victory for the Mail’s ‘Turn the Tide on Plastic’ campaign.

 ??  ?? Menace: Just few of the thousands of pellets at Hayling Island
Menace: Just few of the thousands of pellets at Hayling Island

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom