hello!! plz write a story on end of plastic pollution
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HEY MATE HERE IS YOUR ANSWER
We both know that you probably won't implement all of these suggestions right away. If you're anything like me, it might take you several days to get around to doing even one of the steps I've listed below. But our collective laissez-faire on environmental issues is our biggest obstacle to effective change, and the easiest solutions tend to start at home; no need to even leave the kitchen. Small actions like recycling your plastic bags instead of throwing them in the trash and replacing your cheap, plastic razor with a reusable alternative are two ultra-easy habits to get started. Don't give up!
This year's Earth Day theme is End Plastic Pollution, offering a great jumping-off point for home improvement. Which plastic products keep cluttering up your trash bin, and what are their alternatives? Below are seven super easy ways to remove excess plastic from your life (and the environment, where it will live on forever). Make sure to look up your own municipal collection rules for even more tricks
Ending plastic pollution is about avoiding plastic in the first place and if unable to, reusing or recycling the material as opposed to tossing it into the garbage towards the landfill or onto the ground embarking it upon a journey to the sea. Plastics do not biodegrade. They actually resist biodegradation, but will eventually break down into small particles from exposure to the elements, sunlight and especially seawater. These small particles resemble food to marine life and the results are tragic and come back to us in the form of toxic food, the environment in the form of toxic degradation and to wildlife in the form of toxic death.Plastic constitutes 90% of all trash floating in the world's oceans with some areas having a ratio of 6-to-1 plastic to plankton by weight in 1999 and 46-to-1 plastic to plankton ratio in 2008 . The world produces 300 billion pounds of plastic each year. 10% of this plastic ends up in the oceans where 70% eventually sinks damaging habitats on the ocean floor. The rest floats or remains suspended just below the ocean surface forming these massive garbage patches, or washing up on a distant shore. There is little we can do to clean our oceans, for a cleanup effort would bankrupt any country, but there is much we can do to change our ways to prevent further destruction both in the ocean and on land. The best solution is prevention
From poisoning and injuring marine life to disrupting human hormones, from littering our beaches and landscapes to clogging our waste streams and landfills, the exponential growth of plastics is now threatening the survival of our planet.
In response, Earth Day Network is focusing on fundamentally changing human attitude and behavior about plastics and catalyzing a significant reduction in plastic pollution.
Our strategy to End Plastic Pollution includes:
Supporting the adoption of a global framework to regulate plastic pollutionEducating and mobilizing citizens across the globe to demand action from governments and corporations to control and diminish plastic pollutionInforming and activating citizens to take personal responsibility for the plastic pollution that each one of us generates by choosing to reduce, refuse, reuse, recycle and remove plasticsWorking with universities, school teachers and students to End Plastic PollutionWorking with other organizations and networks to build an effective platform End Plastic Pollution by developing resources that others can use and build partnerships.
Promoting the work that cities and local governments are doing to tackle plastic pollutionEmpowering journalists across the globe to report on the problem and its emerging solutions.
Earth Day Network is leveraging the platform of our 50th anniversary in 2020 and is working with key constituencies and influencers in building a world of educated consumers of all ages who understand the environmental, climate and health consequences of using plastics.
We are engaging and activating our global network of NGO’s and grassroots organizations, campus youth, mayors and other local elected leaders, faith leaders, artists and athletes, and primary and secondary students and teachers.
We are supporting events in all continents of the world, building a global following and activating citizens to join our End Plastic Pollution advocacy campaigns.
In sum, we are using the power of Earth Day to elevate the issue of plastic pollution in the global agenda and inspiring and demanding effective action to reducing and controling it.
HOPE IT IT HELPS YOU
FOLLOW ME FOR ANY OTHER QUESTIONS
We both know that you probably won't implement all of these suggestions right away. If you're anything like me, it might take you several days to get around to doing even one of the steps I've listed below. But our collective laissez-faire on environmental issues is our biggest obstacle to effective change, and the easiest solutions tend to start at home; no need to even leave the kitchen. Small actions like recycling your plastic bags instead of throwing them in the trash and replacing your cheap, plastic razor with a reusable alternative are two ultra-easy habits to get started. Don't give up!
This year's Earth Day theme is End Plastic Pollution, offering a great jumping-off point for home improvement. Which plastic products keep cluttering up your trash bin, and what are their alternatives? Below are seven super easy ways to remove excess plastic from your life (and the environment, where it will live on forever). Make sure to look up your own municipal collection rules for even more tricks
Ending plastic pollution is about avoiding plastic in the first place and if unable to, reusing or recycling the material as opposed to tossing it into the garbage towards the landfill or onto the ground embarking it upon a journey to the sea. Plastics do not biodegrade. They actually resist biodegradation, but will eventually break down into small particles from exposure to the elements, sunlight and especially seawater. These small particles resemble food to marine life and the results are tragic and come back to us in the form of toxic food, the environment in the form of toxic degradation and to wildlife in the form of toxic death.Plastic constitutes 90% of all trash floating in the world's oceans with some areas having a ratio of 6-to-1 plastic to plankton by weight in 1999 and 46-to-1 plastic to plankton ratio in 2008 . The world produces 300 billion pounds of plastic each year. 10% of this plastic ends up in the oceans where 70% eventually sinks damaging habitats on the ocean floor. The rest floats or remains suspended just below the ocean surface forming these massive garbage patches, or washing up on a distant shore. There is little we can do to clean our oceans, for a cleanup effort would bankrupt any country, but there is much we can do to change our ways to prevent further destruction both in the ocean and on land. The best solution is prevention
From poisoning and injuring marine life to disrupting human hormones, from littering our beaches and landscapes to clogging our waste streams and landfills, the exponential growth of plastics is now threatening the survival of our planet.
In response, Earth Day Network is focusing on fundamentally changing human attitude and behavior about plastics and catalyzing a significant reduction in plastic pollution.
Our strategy to End Plastic Pollution includes:
Supporting the adoption of a global framework to regulate plastic pollutionEducating and mobilizing citizens across the globe to demand action from governments and corporations to control and diminish plastic pollutionInforming and activating citizens to take personal responsibility for the plastic pollution that each one of us generates by choosing to reduce, refuse, reuse, recycle and remove plasticsWorking with universities, school teachers and students to End Plastic PollutionWorking with other organizations and networks to build an effective platform End Plastic Pollution by developing resources that others can use and build partnerships.
Promoting the work that cities and local governments are doing to tackle plastic pollutionEmpowering journalists across the globe to report on the problem and its emerging solutions.
Earth Day Network is leveraging the platform of our 50th anniversary in 2020 and is working with key constituencies and influencers in building a world of educated consumers of all ages who understand the environmental, climate and health consequences of using plastics.
We are engaging and activating our global network of NGO’s and grassroots organizations, campus youth, mayors and other local elected leaders, faith leaders, artists and athletes, and primary and secondary students and teachers.
We are supporting events in all continents of the world, building a global following and activating citizens to join our End Plastic Pollution advocacy campaigns.
In sum, we are using the power of Earth Day to elevate the issue of plastic pollution in the global agenda and inspiring and demanding effective action to reducing and controling it.
HOPE IT IT HELPS YOU
FOLLOW ME FOR ANY OTHER QUESTIONS
shivamcandoit:
I will follow u
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