Drastic plastic: Vietnam beach awash with
tide of blue waste
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[June 04, 2018]
By Kham Nguyen and Thinh Nguyen
THANH HOA, Vietnam (Reuters) - There's
almost more plastic than sand on this long, tree-lined beach: Plastic
helmets, plastic furniture and the plastic leg of a shop mannequin all
jut out of an ocean of blue plastic bags.
Just south of the capital Hanoi, the once-peaceful and clean beach of Da
Loc in Vietnam's Thanh Hoa province, has been slowly suffocating under
the weight of plastic waste for decades.
"Plastic bags have been waste here since the first day we started using
them," said Pham Thi Lai, 60, a local seafood processor.
"They put everything in a plastic bag. If they're preserving shrimp or
preserving fish, they put it in a plastic bag," Lai said of local
fishermen, many of whom shuck clam shells and dry shrimp between the
mounds of plastic waste on the beach.
"When they finish they just throw the bags into the ocean. The trash
floats to wherever the sea level rises," she said.
Vietnam is the fourth-largest contributor to marine plastic pollution
globally, a 2015 study by the University of Georgia showed.
Globally, eight million tonnes of plastic is dumped into the ocean every
year, killing marine life and entering the human food chain, according
to the U.N. Environment Programme.
The latest example was a pilot whale that died in Thailand with some 80
pieces of plastic rubbish found in its stomach.
The theme of World Environment Day on Tuesday is beating plastic
pollution, with a call for citizens, companies and civil society groups
to organize the "biggest-ever worldwide cleanup".
On Monday, 41 embassies and international organizations in Vietnam
signed a pledge to combat plastic pollution in the country.
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A woman walks at the beach covered with plastic waste in Thanh Hoa
province, Vietnam June 4, 2018. REUTERS/Kham
"As international partners, we have the privilege to work in
Vietnam, and have a collective responsibility to reduce our plastic
footprint in this beautiful country," Canadian ambassador Ping
Kitnikone said in a statement.
The problem in Vietnam has become so bad that some people in tourist
areas have started handing out reusable bags made from rattan, and
use newspapers to wrap market produce.
Officials in charge of the beach at Da Loc have struggled to keep up
with the rising tide of waste.
"Water rises and falls everyday, how can we clean it all?" said Ngo
Ngoc Dinh, head of Da Loc People's Committee. "We can't escape it,
we have to solve it ourselves".
"But we hope proper campaigns can help reduce environmental waste".
(Reporting by Kham Nguyen and Thinh Nguyen; Writing by Mai Nguyen;
Editing by James Pearson and Darren Schuettler)
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