Table of Contents

A Sea Change – Seeing through the plastics problem

Campaign to make London a city free of single-use plastic water bottles (further development of the plastic pollution experiment)

Aim

Develop and implement a high impact, ‘system-change’ campaign to end the use of single-use plastic water bottles in London, optimising the resources and networks of the Marine CoLABoration group, in order to:

  1. Promote understanding within the UK of the problem of single use plastics on the ocean and tangible actions to address it.
  2. Effect a measurable reduction in the amount of plastic litter going into the Thames and the ocean.
  3. Connect individual behaviour in the city to impact on the sea.
  4. Provide a platform to encourage and align existing initiatives and emerging innovations.
  5. Incentivise more appropriate and more connected local public policies and systems.
  6. Showcase what is possible in a flagship global city, inspiring change elsewhere.
  7. Develop and assess the effectiveness of a systemic approach focused locally, which seeks to shift underlying values and structures in order to create a step-change in behaviour and practice.
  8. Explore and identify opportunities and mechanisms to scale and replicate the campaign nationally and internationally.

Approach

Over the next two years, develop, implement and assess the impact of an innovative London-wide campaign to make London single-use-plastic-water-bottle free, seeking change through a holistic and multi-targeted approach, which will include some or all of the following:

Evidence base

Stakeholder engagement

Systems design

Communication

Outputs

Background

Developing the concept

The idea for a single-use plastic water bottle campaign in London emerged from a series of Marine CoLABoration discussions exploring the critical issues facing the ocean, levers for change, and how/where LAB members should focus their expertise and networks to deliver step-change, with outcomes beyond the reach of any one organisation. The concept has been tested with science, conservation and industry experts at the Economist World Ocean Summit and the Plasticity Forum in June, and explored with an expert panel and audience at Selfridges department store in London during its Project Ocean events, which this year focused on marine plastics. LAB members worked closely with Selfridges who removed single-use plastic water bottles for the Project Ocean launch in July 2015, resulting in significant media attention. This could be considered the first step in the campaign.

What is the Marine CoLABoration?

The Marine CoLABoration is a group of nine UK-based NGOs exploring how to collaborate and communicate more effectively the role and value of the ocean in people’s lives, in order to secure a sustainable and positive future for the ocean. Established by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (CGF) in early 2015, the Marine LAB meets regularly in workshops hosted by CGF. LAB members are: ClientEarth, Fauna and FIora International (FFI), Forum for the Future, Institute for European Environmental Policy (IEEP), International Programme on the State of the Ocean (IPSO), Marine Conservation Society (MCS), New Economics Foundation (NEF), Thames Estuary Partnership (TEP), and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL).

Why target single-use plastic water bottles?

Plastic is an extremely useful material. It is light, cheap to produce and very durable, but these strengths are also its weaknesses, particularly when it ends up in the sea. Plastic pollution is recognised as one of the most significant and growing threats to ocean health. Eight to 13 million tonnes of plastic go into the ocean every year and by 2050 it is estimated humanity will have produced 33 billion tonnes of which 10-15% will be in the ocean. The problem is pervasive, with every part of the ocean now affected, negatively impacting people, the environment and the economy.

A variety of solutions are emerging, but the issues are complex and a systemic approach is needed targeting values, behaviour, design, policies and systems in/for industry, government and the general public to create significant, lasting change. Though one of the easier forms of pollution to deal with, plastic bottles remain a highly visible component of marine litter and in a country like the UK, with safe water in our taps, the one-off use of plastic for drinking water seems particularly egregious. A campaign to reduce the use of single-use plastic water bottles in London would create a strong iconic focus and clear agency for individual/organisational action, giving traction to the issue, complementing the existing initiatives and organisations working in the marine litter space, and promoting innovation. It’s a great way to make a complex global issue local and personal, engaging people’s imagination and thought processes on the bigger issue of single use and the marine environment.

Why the focus on London?