The effectiveness of legislative and voluntary strategies to prevent ocean plastic pollution: Lessons from the UK and South Pacific
- PMID: 34371341
- DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.112778
The effectiveness of legislative and voluntary strategies to prevent ocean plastic pollution: Lessons from the UK and South Pacific
Abstract
The islands of the South Pacific contribute a fraction of the mis-managed plastics in the world's ocean, yet the region is one of the main recipients of its impacts. Based on expert interviews and a review of current strategies to prevent marine plastic pollution in six countries (Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, Tonga, Vanuatu, United Kingdom), this paper identifies several interventions - legislative, financial, voluntary - which governments, organisations and individuals can learn from. Both voluntary and statutory consumer-based behaviour change campaigns are well developed and somewhat successful in several countries. While sub-national policies do not inhibit progress, they are not optimal. Harmonisation across the territories of federal and devolved systems is beneficial, such as container return schemes, levies, and bans. Vanuatu has displayed high ambition, and the challenges in achieving this serve as a case study. A coordinated global strategy with associated legislation aimed at tackling plastic pollution is critical.
Keywords: Australia; Fiji; Marine debris; Marine litter; Marine plastic pollution; New Zealand; Ocean plastic; Oceania; Pacific Islands; Pacific Ocean; South Pacific; Tonga; United Kingdom; Vanuatu.
Crown Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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