February 23, 2018

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Global effort could cut ocean plastics by 77% by 2025

Seal caught in plastic rope. Credit: Alex Mustard, courtesy of Marine Conservation Society
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Seal caught in plastic rope. Credit: Alex Mustard, courtesy of Marine Conservation Society

Global funding to revolutionise waste management in the world's worst polluting countries could clean up ocean plastic by 77% by 2025.

That's the claim in an exclusive report urging immediate action to step up waste management worldwide.

It comes a year after David Attenborough's BBC series, Blue Planet II horrified the nation with powerful images of wildlife harmed and slayed by .

"We have no right to harm the lives of other creatures by allowing plastics to get into the ," said Brunel University London Professor, Edward Kosior.

Launching the report at this week's Ocean Plastics Crisis Summit, Prof Kosior said: "This dire situation calls for strong immediate action to slow the rate at which waste is produced."

"We have to end this dig-use-discard mentality. Every package that's made should be recyclable. There's no excuse. It is a must for all."

The report says caps on plastic waste and stamping out waste mismanagement by the top 10 polluting countries, could cut ocean plastics by 77%. That would reduce yearly volume of plastic going into the oceans to 2.4 to 6.4 million tons by 2025.

Speaking at London's Royal Geographical Society, Professor Kosior who runs recycling company, Nextek dubbed the UK's export of plastics recycling to China 'scandalous' because it stops developing recycling here.

"Developed countries need to invest in developing countries with global support from the UN," he said, to help poorer countries better manage their .

Calling for 'a paradigm shift in ,' Prof Kosior added: "The global magnitude of the problem means it needs to be on the agendas of international leaders such as the G20 summits, UN Assembly and World Economic Forum."

What the report says

Co-written by Irene Crescenzi, Stopping Ocean Plastics an Agenda For Action highlights how:

Provided by Brunel University

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