The Scotsman

Scotland is facing a potential litter emergency

We must encourage respect and support people to look after places they love, says Barry Fisher

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Walking the same local routes during lockdown made it starkly apparent to me when new items of litter joined the growing accumulati­on that is slowly, but surely pushing Scotland towards a litter emergency. And, it wasn’t just me that started to more acutely notice my surroundin­gs; the good and the bad. Many of those we support also became aware of an increasing disregard some had for their neighbourh­oods.

The highly emotive images of our beauty spots being trashed during the summer raised the profile of issues we have been addressing in our cities, towns and villages for years. Litter. Flytipping. Dog fouling.

We monitor these indicators of poor local environmen­tal quality annually, and while we reported positive

improvemen­ts in 2013, things have slowly, but steadily got worse. Results between 2018 and 2020 highlight that, across most indicators, standards have dropped to levels not observed in any previous national monitoring.

Worryingly the increase in litter, dog fouling, weeds and graffiti has been steeper in our most deprived communitie­s – where now 49% of people see litter as a problem compared to 19% in less deprived areas. The evidence shows that the decline is likely to be having hugely detrimenta­l effects across a range of policy objectives, such as physical wellbeing, tourism, local regenerati­on, mental health, crime and the perception of crime.

There are many complex reasons behind this: an absence of strategic and coordinate­d action across all sectors and stakeholde­rs; an ongoing decline

in funding to tackle the issue; and largescale, long term societal trends around consumptio­n, convenienc­e and singleuse.

The facts are indisputab­le – we face a potential litter emergency.

With a new litter type emerging, the single-use face mask, a symbol of our disregard for Scotland, the truth is, we all need to question our habits; what we consume, what we throw away, and how we look after our local neighbourh­oods.

But, we don’t want to just moan about the problem. We want to be able to support people and organisati­ons to make a difference, whether that be cleaning up, surveying, delivering localised on the ground campaigns, or raising the issue politicall­y. We need to harness public concern and turn it into a movement, a wave of change that makes the illegal behaviours unacceptab­le.

More widely, as a charity working to combat climate change too, we know that we must encourage respect and support people to look after the places that they love if we are to have any hope of solving the global climate and nature crises. Tackling litter will help this.

Our new report‘ Time for a new approach to tackling litter’ not only spells out the horrifying facts, but also recommends a bold approach to safeguardi­ng and improving Scotland’s local environmen­ts. No one organisati­on or individual can solve this. We know what our part is, but we need everyone to join us to make our communitie­s, businesses and individual­s truly litter-ate so we can address the behaviours driving this decline. What are you going to do to prevent a litter emergency? Will you join us to tackle litter and waste?

Barry Fisher, CEO, Keep Scotland Beautiful

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