It's World Oceans Day and the focus is on plastic pollution - Action News
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It's World Oceans Day and the focus is on plastic pollution

Wrappers, bags and bottles are scattered around the shores, and some of that trash will inevitably end up in the ocean.

Municipalities N.L. pushes once again for a provincial ban on plastic grocery bags

Grade 5 students play interactive games at Middle Cove Beach as part of World Oceans Day. (CBC)

Wrappers, bags and bottles are scattered around the shores of Newfoundland and Labrador, and some of that trash will inevitably end up in the ocean.

"People leave it on the beach and it sweeps out or the wind will blow it in," saysKeira O'Keefe, a Grade 5 student learning about the aquatic environment as part of World Oceans Day on June 8.

O'Keefe and other students were at Middle Cove Beach on Thursday, learning about local aquatic life and this year's World Oceans Day theme: marine debris.

David Tipton is the Manager of Field Operations and Outreach with Oceans Learning Partnership. (CBC)

"It's a really important issue, it's a large global problem," said David Tipton, with the Oceans Learning Partnership.

"We focus on the alternatives, the solutions, the technology and the champions so the oceans plastics heroes in our backyard people championing recycled products, researches at MUN doing wonderful work on technology to reduce plastics in the ocean, and also to clean up and monitor plastics in the ocean."

Kids get up close and personal with sea life for World Oceans Day

6 years ago
Duration 3:03
Some kids get to know their local sea life at Middle Cove Beach

Tipton was part of a World Oceans Day events on Thursday and had groups of studentscleanup Middle Cove Beach and meetpeople who work in and around the ocean.

"They're hands on with the touch tank we have a wonderful table from [the Department of Fisheries and Oceans] that really helps show when you add something to the land-based environment how that all flows down into the ocean," saiod Tipton.

Plastic bag ban

Municipalities Newfoundland and Labradoris marking World Oceans Daywith a "social media day of action," CEO Craig Pollettsaid.

MNL wants a provincial ban on single-useplastic grocery bags and is encouraging people to "tweet along" and share their opinion.

"These bags don't biodegrade. They break down into millions of tiny pieces of micro plastic," Pollett told CBC's CrossTalk.

"They're always in the ecosystem, in our water, being eaten by animals that we eventually eat."

Pollett acknowledges there are many pollutants introduced to our natural environment,but believes plastic bags is one of the easiest to eliminate.

With files from Zach Goudie