Less litter on beaches is a sign plastic curbs work
THE amount of litter on British beaches is falling, but conservationists are calling for more action to tackle the plastic that makes up three quarters of rubbish on our shores.
The Marine Conservation Society (MCS) said more than 6,000 volunteers took part in its annual “Great British beach clean” in September, collecting a total of 5,065 kilograms of litter.
The average amount of rubbish is dropping year on year, according to the clean-up and survey which found an average of 385 items per 100-metre stretch of beach this year, down from 425 items in 2020 and 558 in 2019.
And it appears efforts to curb problem plastic waste such as cotton bud sticks and single use bags are having an impact, with a fall in those types of litter, the MCS said.
But with 75% of all the items collected in the beach cleans made of plastic or polystyrene, the conservation charity is calling for ambitious policies that would phase out the manufacture and sale of plastic products in the UK.
The five most common litter items on UK beaches were plastic or polystyrene pieces which made up 112 items per 100 metres on average, followed by cigarette stubs, crisp and sweet packets and lolly sticks, plastic caps and lids and string or cord.
Cotton bud sticks moved out of the UK’s top 10 most common items of rubbish this year, with the number recorded the lowest in the beach clean’s 28-year history.
Just six sticks were found per 100 metres of surveyed beach - down from 15 in 2020, which the MCS said was an indication policies to outlaw plastic cotton buds – by Scotland in 2019, followed by England last year – were working.
Numbers of single-use plastic bags on beaches have also continued to drop, from an average of 13 per stretch of beach in 2013 to just three in 2021.
Nearly a third (32%) of beaches cleaned in the annual event found PPE litter, although masks were well down the list of the most common rubbish items found, ranking 59th out of 121.
Lizzie Prior, beachwatch manager at the Marine Conservation Society said: “The ongoing downward trend we’re seeing in litter levels on UK beaches is a positive sign that the actions we’re taking at a personal, local and national level are working.”