World Environment Day: “Beat
Plastic Pollution”
A dump for used plastic bottle in Hanoi, Vietnam.- AFP |
On World Environment Day 2018, United Nations
Secretary-General António Guterres has a simple message: “Reject single-use
plastic”.
By Robin Gomes
“Beat Plastic Pollution” is the theme of this year’s United
Nations World Environment Day, Tuesday. The theme for the June 5 annual
observance is an invitation to make changes in everyday life to reduce the
heavy burden of plastic pollution on our natural places, our wildlife – and our
own health.
Disposable plastic
Despite the many valuable uses of plastic, people everywhere have become over reliant on single-use or disposable plastic – with severe environmental consequences.
Around the world, 1 million plastic drinking bottles are
purchased every minute, and every year, up to 5 trillion disposable
plastic bags are used. In total, 50 per cent of the plastic is
of single use.
Nearly one third of used plastic packaging escapes
collection systems, which means it ends up clogging the world’s city streets
and polluting the natural environment.
Microplastics
In a message for this year’s World Environment Day, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres expressed serious concern saying “our world is swamped by harmful plastic waste.” “Every year, more than 8 million tonnes end up in the oceans,” he said, adding that “microplastics in the seas now outnumber stars in our galaxy.” Plastic pollution is affecting even remote areas of the planet, including the Artic. “If present trends continue, by 2050,” Guterres warned, “our oceans will have more plastic than fish.”
Microplastics are small plastic pieces less than five
millimeters long which can be harmful to our ocean and aquatic life,
and they also make their way into the water supply and enter human
bodies. Marine life, including fish for human
consumption, is also affected by microplastics.
Plastics contain a number of chemicals, many of which
are toxic or disrupt hormones. Plastics can also serve
as a magnet for other pollutants, including dioxins, metals and
pesticides.
Guterres has a simple message on World Environment Day:
“Reject single-use plastic. Refuse what you can’t re-use.”
Pope Francis
Pope Francis an ardent champion of the environment published an encyclical “Laudato Si” in 2015 in which he takes an integral and holistic approach to the created world, with its ethical, moral, social and political implications on man.
The Pope marked World Environment Day, Tuesday, tweeting a
prayer: “Lord, reawaken in us a sense of praise and gratitude for our Earth,
and for everything you have created.”
Narendra Modi, the Prime minister of India, the host
of this year’s World Environment Day, also had a tweet: “Together, let us
ensure that our future generations live in a clean and green planet, in harmony
with nature.”
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