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  • Marine Debris: Human-Created Waste

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Marine Debris: Human-Created Waste

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Category: Environmental Activities

Plastic straws are consistently one of the most littered plastic items, which means they end up in our waterways and are harmful to fish and wildlife. Single-use plastic products, like plastic beverage bottles, are the “biggest source of trash” found in or near water bodies, according to the Ocean Conservancy.

TheLastPlasticStraw.org | 100 ways to live plastic free

500 million plastic beverage straws are used every day in the United States and then immediately discarded, adding to the flow of trash to landfills and litter polluting lakes and beaches.

 Watch. Explore. Discover.

The health of the ocean is in danger. Conservation planning and restoration projects are making a difference.

View the beauty and mystery of the ocean realm captured on video around the globe.

Read More: Ocean Today

Marine debris, also known as marine litter, is human-created waste that has deliberately or accidentally been released in a lake, sea, ocean or waterway. Floating oceanic debris tends to accumulate at the center of gyres and on coastlines, frequently washing aground, when it is known as beach litter or tidewrack. Deliberate disposal of wastes at sea is called ocean dumping.

Ten Ways to Unpackage Your Life

Ten Ways to Unpackage Your Life

Bring Your Own Bag

Say no to single use paper and plastic bags and bring your own high quality reusable bag. Whether you’re picking up groceries, getting takeout food or clothes shopping, use your own bag. Each reusable bag can eliminate hundreds (if not thousands) of single-use plastic or paper bags!

Carry a Reusable Water Bottle

Each week, Americans buy enough plastic water bottles to circle the earth five times! Carrying your own bottle cuts waste and is much cheaper. Typically, bottled water costs 2000 times more than tap water, is actually less safe to drink, and loses taste tests in competition with tap water.

Pack a Waste-Free Lunch

Do away with throw-away lunch packaging. Each child who brings a brown bag lunch to school every day generates 67 pounds of waste each year.

Bring Your Own Cup

The average American once used 500 paper cups a year. Replacing your single-use paper, plastic or Styrofoam cups with a reusable cup or mug can have a huge impact. Try keeping a cup in your bag, at the office, or in your car so you always have one around. Most coffee shops offer a discount for bringing your own cup!

Slow Down and Dine In

A big reason we have a food packaging problem to begin with is because people want to eat on the go – whether it's a drive-through or grab-n-go. Take a breath, slow down and dine in. Get your coffee “for here” or enjoy a home-cooked meal with friends and family and say goodbye to single-use packaging.

Say NO to Straws or Bring Your Own

Plastic straws are consistently one of the most littered plastic items, which means they end up in our waterways and are harmful to fish and wildlife. Say NO to straws! If you really need one, get a reusable straw and bring your own. To get a sense of the problem, check out this funny.

Avoid Heavily Packaged Foods

Heavily packaged foods are bad for the environment and they’re usually unhealthy for you too. Buy foods that aren’t heavily packaged, like fresh produce and bulk items.

Bring Your Own Container and Utensils

Need to grab lunch on the go? Bring your own container and utensils to cut down on “the other leftovers” from your take out meal. You can also bring your own container for leftovers when you eat at a restaurant - no more single-use "doggie bags"!

Use No Bag or a Fabric Bag to Carry Produce and Other Grocery Items

You’ve worked so hard to bring reusable bags to the store, why fill them up with plastic produce bags? Bring your own fabric bags for produce and bulk items. Many companies make reusable produce bags from hemp, organic cotton and even recycled plastic.

Communicate

Let your friends and family know what you’re doing and help them get involved. Write letters to companies that over-package and tell them you’re concerned about this issue. You’ll be surprised how powerful leading by example can be!

Millions of tons of plastic waste enter the ocean every year, even plastic that goes in the trash can often ends up in the sea!

 Story of Bottled Water

The film explores the bottled water industry’s attacks on tap water and its use of seductive, environmental-themed advertising to cover up the mountains of plastic waste it produces. The film concludes with a call to take back the tap, not only by making a personal commitment to avoid bottled water, but by supporting investments in clean, available tap water for all.

Story of Bottled Water FAQs

Story of Bottled Water FAQs

Credits
The Story of Bottled Water was co-created and released by The Story of Stuff Project and a coalition of partners, including Corporate Accountability International, Food & Water Watch, Polaris Institute, Pacific Institute and Environmental Working Group. The movie was produced by Free Range Studios.

Is bottled water cleaner?

The EPA regulates tap water under the Safe Drinking Water Act. Public water operators must provide reports to customers describing their water’s source, evidence of contaminants, and compliance with federal, state, and local regulations. The FDA regulates bottled water and cannot require certified lab testing or violation reporting; bottlers themselves are responsible for testing. Furthermore, the FDA doesn’t require bottled water companies to disclose where the water came from, how it was treated, or what contaminants it contains.

Is bottled water tastier?

Corporate Accountability International’s “Think Outside the Bottle” Campaign has held countless taste tests comparing bottled water to tap water, as have many media outlets, from the New York Times to Cleveland’s local TV news channel. The results generally favor the tap. But ultimately, the point isn’t whether one tastes better than the other, its how our taste—and our tastes—are shaped by advertising rather than by what’s good for us.

Is bottled tap different than plain tap?

Bottled water companies go to great length to tell you that while their water originates from a public water source, its more than just filtered tap water. They boast proprietary, state-of-the-art, multistage filtration processes and esoteric references to mineral additives that make their water more than just water, and certainly better than tap.

But, as Tony Clarke of Canada’s Polaris Institute points out in his book, Inside the Bottle, “unlike other resource production processes, where raw materials like timber, minerals, and oil are transformed into new products, bottled water is different. Bottled water is about ‘turning water into water.'” And keep in mind that 10 percent to 15 percent of the cost of bottled water goes to the advertising budget. We not only buy their myths, we pay extra for them!

What’s the energy footprint of water bottles?

The Pacific Institute breaks it down like this: “Because bottled water required approximately 1 million tons of PET [Polyethylene Terephthalate] in 2006, those bottles required roughly 100 billion MJ of energy. A barrel of oil contains around 6,000 MJ, so producing those bottles required the equivalent of around 17 million barrels of oil. This is enough energy to fuel one million American cars for one year.” If that sounds crazy that’s because it is!

Really, water is a right?

General Comment 15 of the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights—the definitive interpretation of human rights laws regarding water—says “the human right to water entitles everyone to sufficient, safe, acceptable, physically accessible and affordable water for personal and domestic uses” … and …” is indispensable for leading a life in human dignity. It is a prerequisite for the realization of other human rights.”

In other words, it is the job of our governments (as the entities responsible for guaranteeing human rights) to ensure that we have good, clean, affordable tap water.

Need some first steps to take?

Many companies sell safe, easy-to-clean, lightweight drinking water bottles. Food & Water Watch and Corporate Accountability International—two of our partners on this film—offer sleek, stainless steel, reusable bottles to their members. Or pick up a mug or glass or sippy cup or … well, you get the point.

An under-the-sink filter can eliminate both bacterial and chemical concerns if you have either. And you can learn more about your water quality by contacting your local water utility. If find something that concerns you, don’t just turn to bottled water, ask questions, talk to your neighbors and organize to win improvements to your water supply.

What can I do?

Before the bottled water craze hit, we took it for granted that public fountains were part of any public building: schools, offices, sports stadiums and parks. Let’s bring them back! In the U.S., many state building codes mandate that there be one source of public water for every 1,000 people the building has capacity for. Why not subsidize public water fountains as part of local efforts to build gray?

Bottled water bans are also spreading fast.In the U.S., San Francisco, Minneapolis, Seattle, and Salt Lake City have all banned bottled water at city functions to save money and promote their cities’ highly drinkable tap water. And in Canada, the Polaris Institute reports that as of December 2009, 72 municipalities from 8 provinces and 2 territories had implemented restrictions on bottled water. Way to go!

Video: The History of Straws Opening Animation

Created for the 30 min. documentary film STRAWS ©2017, Produced & Directed by Linda Booker, Narrated by Tim Robbins.

 Documentary Film STRAWS

Take Action:
STRAWS Film
The Last Plastic Straw: What can you do to join the movement?

The Last Plastic Straw: What can you do to join the movement?

  • Simply request “no straw please” at bars, cafes, and restaurants and join us in the global movement to eliminate plastic drinking straws from our landfills, our waterways, our oceans, and our beaches. Take the pledge!
  • Reach out to local eateries in your neighborhood or town and ask them to change their protocol to “only serve straws upon request.” Simply download and Print PDF and ask them to try it for the month of July in honor of Plastic Free July.
  • Encourage businesses to make the change to non-plastic straw options – like paper, rye wheat, glass, or stainless steel – if diners do request a straw. We have a business-specific pledge for them to sign, too.
  • Organize a screening of STRAWS the documentary film that features Nuñez and PPC Allies Tim Robbins, Wallace J. Nichols, and Pam Longobardi. See reviews and buy the DVD for public awareness and educational use.
Take Action:
Plastic Pollution Coalition

 Public Downloads

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Public Downloads - Español (Spanish)

When available, we provide all our content with a Spanish version in our public download section. You can find additional material from sources listed in all our articles.

Download Marine Debris Activities, Information and Resources

Download Marine Debris Activities, Information and Resources

pdf-6585An Educators Guide to Marine Debris
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pdf-6586Did You Know Marine Debris Bookmark Series
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pdf-10390Do Not Feed Wildlife Poster
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pdf-6587Evidence Life Cycle Assessment of Supermarket Carrier Bags
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pdf-6588Factsheet on the Marine Debris and Plastic Source Reduction Toolkit
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pdf-6646Family Communication Plan Template
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pdf-5664Marine Debris Unscramble
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pdf-10290National Marine Sanctuaries and NOAA Ocean Literacy Cards
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pdf-10291The Last Straw Community Toolkit
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mp3-6592The Marine Debris Song
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pdf-6591The Marine Debris Song Lyrics
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pdf-6593Top 15 Marine Debris Items
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pdf-6584Trash Free Waters FACTSHEET- Marine Debris What You Can Do
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pdf-5666Understanding Marine Debris Games and Activities Book
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pdf-6596What is Marine Debris Poster
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pdf-10351World Oceans Day Plastic Free Party Kit
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pdf-10352World Oceans Youth Guide
Download

Download Marine Debris Activity Books

Download Marine Debris Activity Books

pdf-6594Guide to Marine Debris Activity Book
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pdf-10257Hawaii’s Ocean Coral Reef is Important Activity Book
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pdf-5662Marine Debris Magnet Craft Activity
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pdf-10258Marine Debris Sorting and I.D. Lesson Activity Sheet
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pdf-10259Ocean Crusaders Dolphins Word Search Activity Sheet
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pdf-10260Ocean Crusaders Ocean Animals Word Search Activity Sheet
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pdf-10261Ocean Crusaders Ocean Sea Animal Word Scramble Activity Sheet
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pdf-10262Ocean Crusaders Ocean Seals and Sea Lions Word Search Activity Sheet
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pdf-10263Ocean Crusaders Penguin Join the Dots Activity Sheet
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pdf-10264Ocean Crusaders Penguin Word Maker Activity Sheet
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pdf-10265Ocean Crusaders Penguin Word Search 2 Activity Sheet
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pdf-10266Ocean Crusaders Penguin Word Search Activity Sheet
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pdf-10267Ocean Crusaders Sea Animals Crossword Activity Sheet
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pdf-10268Ocean Crusaders Shark Maze Activity Sheet
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pdf-10269Ocean Crusaders Shark Word Scramble Activity Sheet
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pdf-10270Ocean Crusaders Shark Word Search Activity Sheet
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pdf-10271Ocean Crusaders Turtle Word Search Activity Sheet
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pdf-10272Ocean Crusaders Whale Alphabet Activity Sheet
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pdf-10273Ocean Crusaders Whale Crossword Activity Sheet
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pdf-10274Ocean Crusaders Whale Word Search 2 Activity Sheet
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pdf-10275Ocean Crusaders Whale Word Search Activity Sheet
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pdf-10276Ocean Crusaders What Sinks and What Floats Plastics Experiment Activity Book
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pdf-10278Planet Protectors Club Case of the Broken Loop Activity Book
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pdf-10277Planet Protectors Club Case of the Broken Loop Activity Book - Spanish
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pdf-10280Planet Protectors Club Follow That Trail Activity Book
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pdf-10279Planet Protectors Club Follow That Trail Activity Book - Spanish
Download
pdf-10282Planet Protectors Club Trash and Climate Change Activity Book
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pdf-10281Planet Protectors Club Trash and Climate Change Activity Book - Spanish
Download
pdf-10284Planet Protectors Create Less Waste in the First Place Activity Book
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pdf-10283Planet Protectors Create Less Waste in the First Place Activity Book - Spanish
Download
pdf-5665Protect Our Oceans Activity Book.
Download
pdf-6590Talking Trash and Taking Action Activity Book
Download

Download Marine Debris Coloring Books

Download Marine Debris Coloring Books

pdf-5663Marine Debris Coloring Book
Download
pdf-10285Ocean Crusaders Dolphin Coloring Sheet
Download
pdf-10286Ocean Crusaders Paper Plate Turtle Coloring Sheet
Download
pdf-10287Ocean Crusaders Penguin Coloring Sheet
Download
pdf-10288Ocean Crusaders Shark Coloring Sheet
Download
pdf-10289Ocean Crusaders Whale Coloring Sheet
Download

Download World Ocean Day Activities

Download World Ocean Day Activities

June 8th

pdf-10583A Watery World Student Lesson Plan Activity Book
Download
pdf-10584Mapping World Plates Student Lesson Plan Activity Book
Download
pdf-10585World Ocean Day Activity Guide
Download
pdf-10586World Ocean Day Word Search Worksheet
Download
pdf-10587World Oceans Activity Worksheets
Download
pdf-10588World Oceans Coral Reefs Student Lesson Plan Activity Book
Download
pdf-10589World Oceans Current Student Lesson Plan Activity Book
Download
pdf-10590World Oceans Location Activity Worksheets
Download
pdf-10591World Oceans Major Bodies of Water Activity Worksheets
Download
pdf-10592World Oceans on Earth Activity Worksheets
Download

Download Marine Debris Videos

Download Marine Debris Videos

mp4-6589How Does Marine Debris Impact the Ocean Animals and Me
Download
mp4-10314Marine Litter
Download
mp4-10315The History of Straws Opening Animation
Download
mp4-6595What Can We Do About Marine Debris
Download
mp4-6597What is Marine Debris
Download
mp4-6598What is the Great Pacific Garbage Patch
Download
mp4-6599Where Does Marine Debris Come From
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mp4-6600Why Is Plastic Marine Debris So Common
Download

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 Plastic shopping bag

That change seemed to already be in effect in  Venice Beach Community, where clerks in all three open checkout lines at a Ralphs supermarket were bagging groceries into a colorful array of reusable bags. Mary Thomas, one of the market's customers, said she has been bringing them for years

A reusable fashionalbe shopping bag is the perfect Christmas (Holiday!) gift. And put a birthday gift in a reusable bag instead of wrapping it!

In use by consumers worldwide - modern lightweight shopping bag is the invention of Swedish engineer Sten Gustaf Thulin.

American and European patent applications relating to the production of plastic shopping bags can be found dating back to the early 1950s

China banned very thin plastic bags nationwide in 2008.  "China Says Its Plastic Bag Ban Has Saved 4.8 Million Tonnes Of Oil"

Read More: Plastic Bag

Video Playlist: Ocean Today Talking Trash and Taking Action

Ocean Today is an interactive exhibit that plays short videos on ocean related themes. Visitors can select from 200+ videos on topics ranging from deep-­‐sea exploration, marine species, and restoration projects to hurricanes, oceans and human health, and climate science and research. These videos are a free resource and are available on our website at oceantoday.noaa.gov.


 

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