1. COASTAL MARINE DEBRIS IN ALASKA: PROBLEMS WITH PLASTICS, POLLUTION, & POLICY
- Author
-
Artusi, Savannah
- Subjects
Plastics -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Environmental aspects ,Marine pollution -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation ,Law - Abstract
'There is no such thing as 'away.' When we throw anything away it must go somewhere.'--Annie Leonard, Executive Director, Greenpeace USA. Plastics pollute people and the planet throughout their lifecycle, from intensive extraction of raw materials to chemical leaching during their use to entangling animals in discarded plastic products. Plastic waste is especially troublesome in Alaska, where the state's extensive shoreline and coastal communities are disproportionately inundated with plastic marine debris. Current policies internationally, in the United States, and in Alaska have not done enough to prevent plastic waste from ending up on Alaska's coasts, to hold plastic producers accountable for that waste, or to provide Alaskan communities the support needed to remove the waste themselves. This Note offers several proposals to address the rising tide of plastic pollution, including a system for holding plastic producers accountable for plastic throughout its life cycle, changes to grant programs that fund marine debris cleanups, and other improvements to existing international, federal, and state plastic policies., I. INTRODUCTION Plastics are everywhere--they are in your clothes, (1) your cups, (2) your air, (3) your food, (4) your blood, (5) and maybe even your brain. (6) Plastic production [...]
- Published
- 2022