‘Nat Geo’s campaign seeks to add energy to India’s bid to shun single-use plastic’

'Nat Geo's campaign seeks to add energy to India's bid to shun single-use plastic'

NEW DELHI: Flagging that even the most pristine of oceanic spaces have been invaded by plastic, a marine scientist and National Geographic explorer Thursday said the NGC’s global initiative ‘Choose the Planet’ seeks to add energy to India’s commitment to shun single-use plastic.

Launched Wednesday as part of National Geographic’s multi-year global campaign ‘Planet or Plastic?’, it aims to significantly reduce the amount of single-use plastic that reaches the ocean, and has garnered support from Prime Minister Narendra Modi and a host of other personalities in the country.

“The aim of the initiative is to educate and sensitise people and seek behavioural changes in them in line with Indian government’s vision to reduce or recycle plastic. The core focus is of course on reduction of single-use plastic, which has emerged as a major concern in the last few years,” National Geographic Fellow Heather Koldewey told PTI in an interview.

She is also a co-leader of an international all-woman team of researchers which in June had embarked on an expedition to study plastic pollution in River Ganga and document the flow of plastic waste from source to sea.

Koldewey, who is currently in India to attend an event of the World Economic Forum here, said the campaign also seeks to involve the industry to come up with “sustainable alternatives” in place of plastic material used in packaging of products.

“Plastic usage is becoming a menace for our planet. Even the most pristine spaces I have explored, I have found plastic there. People think an indiscriminately dumped plastic just goes away, but it doesn’t. It travels through our river and eventually into our oceans.

“Once I had gone to Chagos Archipelago, located south of the southern tip of India in the Indian Ocean, and I venture to one of the uninhabited islands, and found hundreds of plastic bottles there. It wasn’t dumped by humans, but had just been washed ashore. We need to be more responsible,” she said.

Koldewey said battling single-use plastic is “not an easy task” but “journey looks exciting” from here as so many countries, including India are showing the commitment to shun single-use plastic.

Nat Geo India on Wednesday launched a hashtag ‘#Choose tthe Planet’ as part of the initiative and tweeted: “Planet or Plastic? It’s time to #ChooseThePlanet. Tweet to tell us which single-use plastic item you plan to give up. Spread the word and help us contribute towards a plastic-free future.”

It also urged people to take a pledge on reduction of single-use plastic.

Prime Minister Modi retweeted it, saying, “Let this become a mass movement across the world. #PlogForSwachhBharat and #PlogForCleanPlanet as well!”

In an interaction with PTI, Union Environment Minister Prakash Javadekar on Thursday reaffirmed the Modi government’s commitment and vision to make India free of single-use plastic by 2022.

“This is a mass movement. Around 30,000 tonne of single-use plastic waste is generated daily in the country. Out of that 10,000 tonne does not gets collected, and about 20,000 tonne is picked up. But, out government’s overarching vision is to move towards a society free of single-use plastic,” he said.

“It needs a lot of behavioural change, so we are promoting alternative carry bags, made of cloth or jute, instead of polytene ones, with a slogan — ‘Plastic Nahi, Kapda Sahi’,” the minister said.

Koldewey said, India is making a lot of efforts both nationally and locally to achieve the goal, and government-led campaign is a step in the right direction.

“The National Geographic campaign seek to add energy to India’s campaign and support its national commitment to move towards a single-use plastic-free society. And, with more countries working towards choosing planet over plastic I have an enormous amount of hope of saving our planet from this menace,” she said.

The marine scientist said the campaign uses “striking imagery” and “scientific facts” to reach out to the people, adding, “we are not demonising plastic, as it cannot be completely done away with. Idea is to take out single-use plastic and reduce, recycle or repurpose it as much as possible”.

Koldewey currently heads the Zoological Society of London’s Marine and Freshwater Conservation team that works globally to conserve and restore aquatic habitats and species.

She is also part of ‘One Less’, a campaign to build a more ocean-friendly society by working to make London the first capital city to stop using single-use plastic bottles.

“We are into third year now, and Lord’s Cricket Ground and host of other partners have joined in. Our target is to make London free of single-use plastic bottles by 2021,” she said. PTI