Yorkshire Post

TAKING ON PLASTIC POLLUTION

Hugh Fearnley Whittingst­all’s latest programme with Yorkshire’s Anita Rani looks at the war against plastic. He tells Sherna Noah how coronaviru­s affected their filming plans.

- ■ Email: yp.features@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

WHILE TACKLING plastic waste may have gone on the back burner in recent months, for Hugh FearnleyWh­ittingstal­l it most definitely hasn’t.

In the mind of the celebrity chef and TV presenter, the coronaviru­s pandemic has made the problem even more acute.

Disposable masks are turning up in the oceans and shoppers have gone from decrying plastic-wrapped fruit and veg, to feeling they could be the safer option.

This new reality meant copresente­rs Fearnley-Whittingst­all and Bradford-born Anita Rani had to film new scenes for their BBC One show War On Plastic, after having officially finished. The show follows up their first programme on the same topic last year

They look at the “disgusting” phenomenon of plastic in tea bags in the upcoming series and the recycling menace of ready-made sandwich cartons.

They also grill a McDonald’s bigwig – or rather some underwhelm­ed children take him to task – over the contributi­on made by Happy Meal toys to our plastic waste mountain.

Those scenes had all been “done and dusted” when the presenters found the pandemic meant there were new issues to tackle.

“We decided to go back and make some changes to the film,” says the chef, who shot to fame just over 20 years ago when he left London to try to become self-sufficient in the countrysid­e.

“I recorded my voiceover for the film at the beginning of lockdown with my head in a cupboard at home. And it was good to go.

“And then, as the story of Covid went on, we thought, ‘No, this is affecting the plastic situation. We have to address this issue of masks and this understand­able reflex that somehow, food wrapped in plastic is going to be safer’.

“But actually, it really isn’t,” he says. In an interview with the BBC published at the weekend, Rani explained that the pandemic has contribute­d in a negative way to plastic pollution.

“The commonly used blue single-use surgical masks contain polypropyl­ene, a type on non-recyclable plastic, and if every person in the UK was to wear one of these every day for a year, that would create about 128,000 tonnes of plastic waste,” she said.

“If not disposed of responsibl­y, they end up in landfill and our oceans.

“In the show I catch up with Professor Mark Miodownik, an expert in material science to find out more about the role of plastic in this pandemic.”

A scene in the series captures Rani’s horror when she watches, on film, an octopus emerge from underneath a disposable mask on the ocean floor.

“The idea that the world is filling up with millions or billions of disposable plastic masks, and they’re already in the sea, is just too grim for words,” Fearnley-Whittingst­all says.

The series also follows a family who are desperate to cut down on their use of single-use plastic, without spending a fortune. They make homemade oat milk – it involves soaking, rinsing, blending and pouring the liquid through a sieve.

It all looks way too time consuming to catch on, at least in my household.

“I agree that some things are a step too far for some people,” the former River Cottage star says.

However, he has made “no-brainer” changes in his own life – using a cloth shopping bag, a keep cup for takeaway coffee and a reusable water bottle.

“That’s the entry-level stuff but it’s also really big stuff. It makes a massive difference,” he notes.

After discoverin­g his tea bags contained plastic – they “were turning up in the compost undecompos­ed” – he bought loose leaf before finding a plastic-free brand.

And “I recycle” them, he laughs. “I make a Masala Chai by using the tea leaves second time round, with spices. You boil them up with a little bit of milk and some cardamom and ginger. You’ve got a second cup of tea free!”

But it’s not all down to us, he says – the Government must also do more.

He urges Ministers to make businesses and producers “of packaging pay for the effective recycling, or safe disposal of the plastics, rather than passing the problem on to consumers”.

“It’s never been fair that consumers and councils need to pick up the bill for the profligate and unnecessar­y use of single use and unrecyclab­le plastics by big business,” he says.

“That’s one of the problems with Covid. It’s given the Government an excuse to drag its heels on a number of fronts and dealing with the plastics issue seems to be one of them.”

With so much to be fired up about, I wonder how he relaxes – the answer, recently at least, has been discoverin­g the flora near his bucolic home in Devon.

“One of the things I did was teach myself to identify wildflower­s,” he says of lockdown.

“I found well over 150 wildflower­s within a short walk of my front door, and that was amazing.

“Now, whenever I go for a walk, I’m learning all the time.

“I’m seeing things that I didn’t see before. And that’s something that I’ll carry with me.”

He is happiest outdoors – “being in the veg garden, walking the dogs, looking after the chickens and a bit of pond swimming”.

And he hopes that “everybody feels that the countrysid­e is for them.

“That starts at school, taking kids out of school into the country to show them how to identify wild plants and trees,” he says.

If “you make this a part of kids’ lives and understand­ing, then they will nurture the world around them as they grow up”, the father of four adds.

“The bigger the human footprint on the planet, the more important it is that kids are engaged with these issues, from the very beginning of their education.”

Children have become increasing­ly impassione­d about the environmen­t – thanks partly to activist Greta Thunberg – and this fills him with “excitement and belief ”.

“They’re the antidote to the sort of feeling that it’s all too hard, too difficult and too late,” he says.

“If you start to feel that you think, ‘Well, hang on a second, here comes a generation who recognise the problem, and are ready to take action themselves’. So that is brilliant.”

He adds: “Before (Covid), it felt like we were really motoring, really getting somewhere” on the issue of plastics. If it’s gone down the charts a little bit, it’s going to come back because if people start seeing masks turning up in the sea – that’s like Blue Planet II all over again.

“We know that upsets people. And it’s going to motivate public action.”

■ War On Plastic: The Fight Goes On airs at 9pm on BBC One on Tuesday, September 1.

One of the problems with Covid is that it has given the Government an excuse to drag its heels on a number of fronts and dealing with the plastics issue seems to be one of them.

Hugh Fearnely-Whittingst­all, on his latest show War On Plastic.

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 ?? PICTURES: PA/BBC PHOTOS ?? READY FOR BATTLE: Hugh Fearnley-Whittingst­all and Anita Rani have teamed up for another instalment of War On Plastic.
PICTURES: PA/BBC PHOTOS READY FOR BATTLE: Hugh Fearnley-Whittingst­all and Anita Rani have teamed up for another instalment of War On Plastic.
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