Kuwait Times

Thames paddle-boarders try to turn the tide on plastic

Products would take hundreds of years to downgrade

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LONDON: Floating on the murky waters of the River Thames in London, activist paddle-boarders are trying to rid the waterway of a plague of plastic waste and draw attention to the problem. As the sun rises on the Thames behind historic Kew Bridge in the west of the British capital, quacking ducks and gliding swans conjured a serene landscape. But on closer inspection all manner of plastic objects have washed up ashore, including plastic bags hanging from trees.

It is this kind of regularly sullied scene that inspired several members of paddle-board associatio­n Active360 to launch cleaning sessions of the river and canals that run through London. The founders-Paul Hyman, Louise Nolan and James Roorda-took to the water this week to inspect an island for detritus. Within half an hour, they had discovered enough discarded waste to fill a large bucket. The haul includes plastic bottles, ropes, sheeting, cups “and the most unpleasant plastic bags: dog poop bags which seem to get everywhere now,” Nolan said. Many of these products would take hundreds of years to downgrade.

‘1,000 Royal Albert Halls’

Nolan noted their haul was relatively modest anddependi­ng on the tides it can be three or four times larger. For her, this small gesture for the environmen­t is “really gratifying”, but Hyman, the founder of the associatio­n, struggles with its limitation­s. “Cleaning it up, the danger is that we’re just hiding the problem,” he said. “It’s upstream measures that need to happen. There’s no point just cleaning up after people, you need to stop it happening in the first place.”

The associatio­n tries to raise awareness about its efforts on social networks and at a festival held in spring. Their latest battle: attempting to convince coffee shops in the capital to abandon disposable cups, many of which fall into the river. Their anti-plastics campaign is slowly starting to gather momentum, aided in part by the government of Prime Minister Theresa May, who last week announced a plan to fight “one of the great environmen­tal scourges of our time.” “In the UK alone, the amount of single-use plastic wasted every year would fill 1,000 Royal Albert Halls,” she said, referring to the famous London concert hall with more than 5,000 seats.

‘Change in the air’

May’s environmen­tal action plan includes extending a small charge for plastic carrier bagscurren­tly enforced at supermarke­ts-to all retailers in England, as well as urging them to introduce plastic-free aisles. The government will also call for evidence on changes to the tax system or charges on single-use plastic items, such as takeaway containers. However environmen­tal advocates have criticized the proposals as too modest, in particular the pledge to eliminate all avoidable plastic waste only by the end of 2042.

The European Union wants to phase out single-use plastics, aiming to make all packaging reusable or recyclable by 2030. Corporatio­ns also appear to be responding to the growing climate of concern around plastics. On Tuesday, budget supermarke­t chain Iceland, which specialize­s in frozen food, announced it would remove all plastic packaging from its own branded product lines within five years. Coffee and convenienc­e goods chains like Starbucks, Pret a Manger and Costa Coffee also increasing­ly compete in “green” proposals, offering discounts to customers who bring their own mugs and charging more for their disposable cups.

“This year there is definitely a change in the air,” said Hyman, though he remains unconvince­d by May’s plans. “What the government announced last week was interestin­g but it wasn’t very tangible,” he said. As he plays his part in the evolving anti-plastics revolution, Hyman urged others “to think about their own lives and the plastic they use, and to think about what they don’t really need to use. “Just carrying a reusable coffee cup around with you is a really good example.”

 ?? —AFP ?? LONDON: Louise Nolan (L) and James Roorda balance on their paddle-boards as they collect discarded plastic and rubbish from the banks of the River Thames, near Kew Bridge.
—AFP LONDON: Louise Nolan (L) and James Roorda balance on their paddle-boards as they collect discarded plastic and rubbish from the banks of the River Thames, near Kew Bridge.

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