EPA Awards
$214,000 to Reduce Sources of Ocean Pollution
Financing for teacher action projects, reducing
fast-food packaging on UC campuses
SAN
FRANCISCO – The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today awarded more than $214,000 in grants
to the Product Stewardship Institute, Inc. and the Monterey Bay Aquarium to
reduce sources of marine debris in partnership with local students, governments
and businesses.
The Institute
will use a $164,245 grant to implement a study to reduce disposable plastic
packaging—a major source of ocean pollution—on the campuses of three California
coastal universities. It will then use the results of the study to develop a
model program that can be adopted by other universities and fast-food
corporations. The Monterey Bay Aquarium will use a $50,000 grant to train 100
teachers to teach 7,500 students to lead 40 local community action projects to
reduce sources of ocean plastics.
“Reducing waste
at the source, rather than just cleaning it up, is key to protecting our coastal
waters,” said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA’s Regional Administrator for the Pacific
Southwest. “These two projects are big steps forward to reducing the amount of
trash that ends up in our rivers, oceans, and estuaries.”
The Institute
will work to achieve a 40 percent reduction in single-use plastic water bottles
and an 80 percent reduction in polystyrene take-out containers at fast-food
restaurants, dining facilities and student centers at University of California
campuses in Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara, and San Diego.
The Monterey
Bay Aquarium will train 100 K-12 teachers in California to teach 7,500 students
to understand the cause and effect of plastics polluting the ocean, and explore
actions to help address the threat posed by marine debris. In turn, students
will lead 40 local community action projects within coastal watersheds. Results
from this project will be disseminated to 300 teachers at an annual teacher open
house and via the Aquarium’s website.
Trash
targeted by grant work will focus on plastics that
enter California waterways and eventually disintegrate and become part of the
food chain, harming fish and wildlife. The “Great
Pacific Garbage Patch”—two large areas of floating
plastic waste in the North Pacific—is an example of how such plastic waste can
accumulate and pose a serious threat to the environment. Composed primarily of
plastic litter and other debris, such as derelict fishing nets, much of the
trash in the Patch is very small bits of floating plastic debris broken down
through photodegradation.
Grants were
provided under EPA Pacific Southwest region’s Marine Debris program, which seeks
to reduce materials, such as plastics, being released to the aquatic habitats.
Such pollution harms
marine and coastal wildlife, destroys ocean habitats, causes navigation hazards,
results in economic losses to industry and governments, and threatens human
health and safety.
For more
information on EPA’s marine debris program, visit: http://www.epa.gov/region9/marine-debris/
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