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Date: 2024-07-26 Page is: DBtxt001.php txt00017737

Science & Environment
Plastic Pollution

The world is beginning to tackle the threat of plastic waste, according to the renowned broadcaster Sir David Attenborough.

Burgess COMMENTARY
The good news is that Sir David's observations are getting through to a lot of the viewing public, but I don't see any radical accountability being applied in the direction of the people and organizations that are causing the problem. All the organizations that have manufactured plastics and used them to help sell their products have made a lot of profit over many years (decades) and now all the mess has to be cleaned up. This is going to cost money and the organizations that caused the problem should now pay for this ... all these organizations should be assessed an amount of money sufficient to clean up the mess, and this money should be put into a fund to pay for the cleanup. Most companies that have profited over the years from the plastic economy would now be bankrupt ... which would be better than the status quo where profits are winning and planet is losing! We need radical accountability ... now! PeterB
Peter Burgess
Attenborough: World 'changing habits' on plastic ... Sir David Attenborough says the response to plastic pollution has been encouraging

MISSING VIDEO ... The world is beginning to tackle the threat of plastic waste, according to the renowned broadcaster Sir David Attenborough.

'I think we're all shifting our behaviour, I really do,' Sir David said in an interview with the BBC.

Describing plastic pollution as 'vile' and 'horrid', he said there was growing awareness of the damage it can do.

'I think we are changing our habits, and the world is waking up to what we've done to the planet,' he said.

Sir David was speaking as he and the BBC's Natural History Unit (NHU) were announced as the winners of the prestigious Chatham House Prize for their Blue Planet II series of documentaries.

Chatham House, a foreign affairs think-tank based in London, awards the prize to people or organisations making a significant contribution to improving international relations.

Its director, Dr Robin Niblett, described plastic pollution as 'one of the gravest challenges facing the world's oceans'.
  • 'Shame and anger' at plastic pollution
  • Plastic 'berg chokes Indonesian river
  • Plastic particles found in bottled water




He said Sir David and the BBC Studios Natural History Unit played 'an instrumental role in helping to put this issue at the forefront of the public agenda'.

'Blue Planet II spurred a passionate global response and generated clear behavioural and policy change.'

The series revealed how plastic items - estimated to total more than 150 million tonnes - are drifting in the world's oceans and causing the deaths of one million birds and 100,000 sea mammals each year.

In one of the most moving scenes, albatrosses were seen feeding their chicks a diet of plastic which would doom them to die.

The head of the NHU, Julian Hector, said he believed the programmes had 'struck a chord' with the public because they showed 'the interaction of plastic and the natural world'.

'We're emotionally engaging the audience, giving them a connection with life histories, the behaviours, the plans that these animals have got, and how plastic in that case is getting in their way, reducing their chicks' survival.'

MISSING VIDEO ... Video caption BBC Science Editor David Shukman explains how plastic moves around the oceans

For Sir David, these sights are 'very powerful - they speak to parental instinct'; and they seem to have helped motivate people to take action.

'It's the beginning, and people in all parts of society are aware of what's happening, and it's vile, it's horrid and it's something we are clearly seeing inflicted on the natural world and having a dreadful effect and there's something they can do about it.

'So in a way it's a bit of a litmus test to see if the population care about it and people do.'

Sir David said that techniques needed to be devised for handling plastic waste.

'We still need to know how to dispose of the wretched material, surely if we can invent it, somebody somewhere is going to be able to deal with it, to deal with these mountains of this appalling material.'

Also nominated for the Chatham House Prize were Abiy Ahmed, prime minister of Ethiopia, who recently won the Nobel Peace Prize; and Katrín Jakobsdóttir, prime minister of Iceland for her commitment to gender equality.

Sir David's current series with the BBC NHU - Seven Worlds, One Planet - is broadcast on BBC One on Sunday nights.

Follow David on Twitter.

Copyright © 2019 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
By David Shukman, Science editor
19 November 2019
The text being discussed is available at
https://www-bbc-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/science-environment-50419922
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