Keep Plastic out of the Pacific
100 million tons of plastic in our ocean
For decades, people have been dumping millions of tons of plastic and other trash into the Pacific. Today, there’s so much plastic swirling around that the ocean’s currents have formed a toxic soup of plastic trash in an area called the Pacific Garbage Patch.
Located 1,000 miles off the coast, the Pacific Garbage Patch has tripled in size since it was discovered in the 1980s — and it’s expected to double in the next 10 years. It’s creating an environmental disaster for ocean wildlife: plastic and other marine debris kills millions of sea turtles, sea birds and marine mammals every year who mistake it for food.
Marine life in danger
All of this trash in the Pacific is creating an ecological disaster:
- Turtles and seabirds frequently ingest floating plastic, mistaking it for food. They also get entangled in bags and often drown or die of suffocation.
- Adult seabirds inadvertently feed small bits of plastic to their chicks — often causing them to starve to death after their stomachs become filled with plastic.
- Toxic pollutants leach from the plastic into the water. Scientists are now studying whether fish and other marine animals absorb these toxic pollutants. If so, there is a good chance that we also absorb them when we eat fish.
What’s really scary is that scientists tell us this plastic may never biodegrade. And every day we go without tackling this problem, it becomes a little bit worse.
With your help, we can stop the flow of trash and begin the cleanup.
The first thing to do when your bathtub is overflowing is to turn the water off: It is time to turn the trash faucet off so we can start the clean up.
Oregonians use more than 1.7 billion single-use plastic bags each year — and too many of them end up polluting our ocean. The solution is simple: we need to reduce our use of plastic bags. Nothing we use for a few minutes should pollute our oceans for hundreds of years.
Oregonians know this, and are taking action to protect the Pacific. In 2011, 8 Oregon cities formally supported a statewide prohibition on plastic bags, and four pledged to take action if the state did not. The City of Portland led the way, becoming the first city in Oregon to adopt a prohibition.
You can help by spreading the word about how harmful plastic bags are to our oceans, and reduce your personal plastic bag use.
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