By FRANK CARINI/ecoRI News staff
The amount of plastic waste generated at outdoor events, such as road races, adds up quickly. Food scrap is also routinely wasted. (ecoRI News)
Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo’s
recent signing of her “Tackling Plastics” executive order, like the “Clean Seas
Pledge” signed earlier, will likely do little to lessen the plastic scourge
that is helping to destroy the world’s marine waters.
Plastic production is increasing by
some 9 percent annually, and this ever-growing heap of pollution and the
collection of poisons that cling to it is accumulating in the sea. It's
degrading both human and environmental health.
Single-use plastic products such
as Styrofoam cups, straws, water bottles, retail bags, and Mylar balloons are
among the countless pieces scattered across the globe.
Tasks forces, pledges, incentives,
feel-good announcements, voluntary efforts, posting more “Don’t Litter” signs,
shoreline cleanups, press releases, extravagant quotes, and relying on
recycling will hardly make a dent in reducing the estimated 5.25 trillion
pieces of plastic debris in the ocean, from 269,000 tons afloat on the surface
to some 4 billion plastic microfibers per square kilometer in the deep sea.