The real pieces of oceanic plastic garbage are typically smaller than your pinky fingernail.![]()
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Plastic oceans and our health: What we can do
Ruby the Climate Kid 2 May 2017
https://independentaustralia.net/en...ic-oceans-and-our-health-what-we-can-do,10255
Ruby the Climate Kid may be only six-years-old, but she is on a mission to educate and influence the global community to wake up to the scientifically proven, devastating effects of pollution on our oceans and our health. Today, she inspires us to make small changes and #saynotoplastic.
DURING the school holidays, I watched a documentary called A Plastic Ocean and I had to watch a whale die a slow and painful death.
The whale died of malnutrition from his digestive system being blocked by six metres worth of plastic.
I cried, but I didn’t look away. I think too many people look away and ignore what is happening to our planet and all of the amazing creatures in the ecosystems we are destroying.
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The documentary got me thinking: if we are throwing away so much plastic, why isn’t it being recycled? How much are we using? Are there alternatives?
Did you know that we use over 300 million tonnes of new plastic every year and most of that is single-use, used for an average of 12 minutes and then thrown away? Eight million tonnes of that plastic waste ends up in the ocean.
Over 500 billion plastic bags are used every year worldwide, with more than one million every minute. We have produced more plastic in the last ten years than in the whole of the last century.
