The Herald on Sunday

Scotland: the litter bin of planet Earth?

The alarming results of a new project to map the country’s coastal plastic pollution show many ‘litter sink’ sites where global waste is accumulati­ng – and campaigner­s are demanding urgent action

- By Peter Swindon

SCOTLAND is world- renowned for incredible scenery and stunning beaches, but discarded plastics are blighting our shores and harming wildlife, forcing politician­s and environmen­talists to come up with new and innovative solutions to the growing problem.

An ambitious project to map the extent of plastic pollution on Scotland’s 6,000 miles of coastline has already discovered dozens of litter sinks – sites where global waste accumulate­s through a combinatio­n of wind and tide.

The pilot led by Marine Conservati­on Society (MCS) was inspired by a clean-up in 2017 which saw 1,500 volunteers remove 58,000 pieces of litter from 111 beaches in just four days. That figure was up six per cent from 2016.

Head of conservati­on for Scotland at MCS, Calum Duncan, said the results of the latest annual clean-up carried out last month are due to be released next month and there is likely to be another increase.

He said: “Our data for the last 25 years shows that the trend is for increasing rubbish on beaches we’re surveying. Litter levels have doubled since 1993, on average. There’s the legacy issue of the rubbish that’s been discarded to date – nine of the top 10 items we record every year are plastic and plastic doesn’t disappear.

“And the amount of plastic going into the sea shows no sign of abating, whether it’s discarded on the beach, from the side of boats or through our sewage system.”

Lyndsey Dodds, head of marine policy at WWF, said eight million tonnes of plastic pollution enters our oceans each year, and evidence of this can be seen on Scotland’s shores at an increasing number of coastal sites.

“It’s massive problem,” said Dodds, “and pretty much everywhere we look we see it. It’s in our water, in the fish we’re eating and there’s a human health impact. It can affect all marine wildlife. Scotland is home to important seabirds and they ingest plastic, and plastic is found in nests.

“In terms of marine mammals, there’s issues of entangleme­nt there. We have seen pictures of seals with plastic around their necks. Whales have washed up with stomachs full of plastic.”

Dodds said an EU commitment to phase out single-use plastics by 2030 – which was matched by the Scottish Government – is welcome but “that’s not to say there aren’t plenty of things to get on and do now”. She added: “The public appetite for real change is huge, in terms of single use plastics.”

A new plastics processing plant in Perthshire could be part of the solution, according to Iain Gulland, chief executive of Zero Waste Scotland.

The Scottish Government- funded organisati­on has provided £1.7 million for Project Beacon, a partnershi­p of four private-sector firms tasked with developing state-of-the-art systems. Gulland said marine waste could be processed at the “game- changing” Perthshire facility when it’s up and running next year.

“In terms of our marine environmen­t, a lot of that stuff could be fed into this facility,” he said. “In terms of household waste, we’re still throwing away about 70,000 tonnes of packaging that could potentiall­y be put through the system. It’s currently costing councils about £11m a year to send it to landfill.”

The system is expected to recycle around 20,000 tonnes of plastic waste a year and Gulland is hopeful that the pilot could eventually be rolled out across Scotland, meaning councils would no longer be forced to send recycling overseas for processing.

Local authoritie­s currently export thousands of tonnes of plastic waste. It is difficult to find out true quantities because contracts with private-sector companies are kept confidenti­al as they are considered “commercial­ly sensitive”, according to Gulland.

“New technology will allow us to say to householde­rs you can put all plastics out for collection and we’ll be able to sort and recycle them in Scotland,” he said. “The Perthshire plant is designed in modular system so there is scope for increased capacity. And these types of facilities could be located throughout the country.”

The Scottish Government has already banned plastic microbeads and has pledged to legislate against plastic cotton buds. A fund for companies to trial technologi­es to recover marine waste was doubled to £1m last month. Also in the planning is a deposit-return scheme for plastic drinks containers, which would see customers pay a surcharge to be refunded when bottles are returned.

Gulland revealed the Government received more than 3,000 responses to its consultati­on, which closed on September 25. The responses will be analysed in the coming weeks and then released.

“There is a full commitment to get the implementa­tion of that scheme up and running,” Gulland added.

Environmen­t Minister Roseanna Cunningham revealed in The Herald in January that she would ensure Scotland matches an EU commitment to phase out throwaway plastics by 2030. She instructed civil servants to look at restrictin­g the sale and manufactur­e of all non-recyclable plastics “on an item by item basis”.

At the time, director of Friends of the

Litter levels have doubled since 1993 on average and nine of the top 10 items we record every year are plastic

Earth Scotland, Richard Dixon, said the Scottish Government’s commitment was “a strong signal of intent to stop plastic waste at source”.

Speaking to The Herald on Sunday last night, Dixon said 10 months on “not all that much” has been done to meet the pledge.

He said civil servants’ time had been tied up with the bottle deposit-return scheme. Although he welcomed the initiative, Dixon said: “It’s taking up most of the civil servants’ time.”

In May, Cunningham set up an “Expert Panel on Environmen­tal Charging and Other Measures” which will advise ministers “on a set of priority items, starting with disposable cups and plastic straws”, according to its website.

Dixon said: “The expert panel has been asked to come up with recommenda­tions, so the Scottish Government can’t leap forward with interestin­g and exciting announceme­nts at t he moment.”

The panel has met twice and is expected to have an “initial working life” of two years.

Dixon added: “The question is whether the Government leaps into action when they come forward with recommenda­tions. If the response is swift and active that’s fine. If the report sits on a shelf that would be very frustratin­g. I’m happy to give the Scottish Government the time but I expect them to react.”

Calum Duncan of MCS added: “We’d like to see some plastic items banned and levies introduced on other items such as coffee cup lids. We need action and i nter vention. I don’t t hink anybody’s in doubt now that this is a crisis.”

Cunningham was unavailabl­e for interview, but a spokesman provided a prepared statement from the minister which said the manufactur­e and sale of rinse-off personal care products containing plastic microbeads had been banned, and legislatio­n to ban the manufactur­e and s ale of pla s - tic- stemmed cotton buds has been drafted.

The statement said the expert panel is considerin­g the issues of plastic straws and disposable cups “as a priority area” before looking at other materials and “the evidence for taking action”.

The minister’s statement added: “Our work on deposit return, which will help us in recovering and recycling a commonly used plastic, is proceeding. I was encouraged by the positive engagement we’ve had through the consultati­on, which will help us shape the system.

“I look forward to making further announceme­nts on deposit return and the expert panel in due course.”

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 ??  ?? Calum Duncan, head of conservati­on for Scotland at MCS
Calum Duncan, head of conservati­on for Scotland at MCS
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