Strathearn Herald

Green call to throw wipes in bin

- ROBBIE CHALMERS

Perth and Kinross householde­rs are being urged to bin all wipes – and ditch wipes containing plastic - in a major new campaign to help protect the environmen­t.

Scottish Water is asking the public to join forces to avoid sewer blockages, flooding, and pollution by consigning wipes to the bin.

The new nationwide campaign – Nature Calls – is backed by a range of other organisati­ons, including the Marine Conservati­on Society, Keep Scotland Beautiful and Zero Waste Scotland.

Scottish Water chief executive Douglas Millican said:“Our message to our customers is clear: please bin the wipes and help us protect the environmen­t.

“And to policy-makers we say now is the time to ban all wipes containing plastic and rid our sewers, rivers and beaches of this needless problem. Last year, more than 10,000 tonnes of material – the equivalent of 80 blue whales - was removed from Scotland’s waste water plants.

Many thousands of tonnes more ended up blocking sewers, causing flooding, or being flushed into rivers during storms and heavy rain. Research by the Marine Conservati­on Society shows that wipes are now the most common cause of beach pollution.

“Wipes are an understand­able convenienc­e item - but many contain plastic, that cause serious problems when disposed of inappropri­ately by flushing down the toilet - blocked sewers, homes flooded with sewage, and pollution on our beaches and rivers.

“Every year our teams deal with around 36,000 blockages at a cost to customers of £7 million annually and around 80 per cent of the blockages we attend feature wipes.

“Members of the public, communitie­s, campaigner­s, manufactur­ers, retailers and government­s must all work together to do the right thing for nature now and for generation­s to come.”See www. jointhewav­e.scot

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