The Herald

MSP’s plea to drinkers to give up plastic straws to help stop pollution at sea

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PARTYGOERS are being urged to go without straws in drinks this festive season in a drive to cut plastic waste.

SNP MSP Kate Forbes called on bars, cafes and restaurant­s to also stop routinely offering plastic straws to help protect the environmen­t.

The issue of plastic pollution has gathered momentum with the screening of David Attenborou­gh’s Blue Planet II, which includes moving scenes of the damage caused to the world’s oceans and their inhabitant­s.

It is estimated around eight million tonnes of plastic reaches the sea every year and by 2050 there will be more plastic in our oceans than fish.

Earlier this

week Ullapool was hailed for its action to tackle the problem with all 14 bars, restaurant­s and cafes in the village either removing straws altogether or switching to non-plastic alternativ­es.

Ms Forbes, the member for Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch, said that for many giving up straws would be an easy first step in reducing the amount of waste created by single-use disposable plastic items.

She said: “For most of us, straws in our drinks are something we use out of habit, not out of necessity. And plastic straws don’t do our environmen­t any good - they’re just one among many disposable plastic items we encounter day to day, used once, ditched and sent to landfill. They don’t biodegrade and can take centuries to break down.

“Plastic straws can pose a risk to wildlife on land and form part of the eight million tonnes of plastic waste in our seas every year.

“This isn’t a situation that can just continue unchecked.”

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