The Scotsman

Greenpeace voyage highlights impact of plastic pollution

● Wildlife under threat from rubbish ● Demand for deposit scheme for bottles ● Government plans microbeads ban

- By CATRIONA WEBSTER

A scientific voyage has uncovered the impact of plastic pollution on some of the UK’S most treasured seas, beaches and wildlife.

The two-month Greenpeace expedition around the Scottish coastline found widespread environmen­tal damage caused by plastic bottles, bags, packaging and fragments.

Campaigner­s want urgent action to address the problem and a petition will be submitted to Scotland’s environmen­t secretary Roseanna Cunningham today calling for the introducti­on of a deposit return scheme for drinks containers in Scotland.

Tisha Brown, oceans campaigner at Greenpeace UK, said: “It cannot be right that our beaches, seas and the stunning wildlife they are home to should become the final dumping ground for throwaway plastic bottles and other plastic trash.

“With a truckload of plastic entering the ocean every minute, we need urgent action from government­s and from major soft drinks companies which produce billions of single-use plastic bottles every year, like Cocacola, to stop the flow of plastic into the sea.”

The petition handover coincides with the arrival of the Greenpeace ship the Beluga II in Edinburgh to present the initial findings from its mission, carried out in May and June.

Researcher­s found plastic strewn on more than 30 beaches in remote areas, microplast­ics in the foraging grounds of basking sharks and seabirds, and animals entangled in rubbish.

Pollution was discovered in the nests and beaks of seabirds in internatio­nally-significan­t colonies including on the Bass Rock, Isle of May and the Shiant Isles.

The expedition conducted more than 40 scientific trawls in remote and biodiverse areas which are home to wildlife including seals, puffins and whales, with early analysis revealing plastic in multiple samples.

The samples will be sent to the Greenpeace research laboratori­es at Exeter University for full analysis with complete results to be published later this year.

A Scottish Government spokeswoma­n said: “Marine litter is a serious issue which adversely affects the health of Scotland’s seas and the world’s oceans.

“It impacts on our wildlife and damages our marine environmen­t, on which many livelihood­s depend.

“We are working with the internatio­nal OSPAR Commission to reduce substantia­lly the amount of litter entering the marine and coastal environmen­t.

“The potential benefits of a deposit return scheme are currently being assessed.

“We are also developing legislatio­n to ban the sale and manufactur­e of personal care products containing plastic microbeads.”

0 Birds and other wildlife under threat from discarded plastic

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