Litter report suggests plastic pieces have exceeded cigarette butts on Bay shores

Litter report suggests plastic pieces have exceeded cigarette butts on Bay shores

Save The Bay’s 2023 International Coastal Cleanup Report demonstrates a new trend in shoreline litter

Plastic pollution and debris
Plastic breaks down, but never fully disappears, resulting in coastal areas covered in tiny plastic pieces.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. – January 23, 2024 – For the first time in the history of Rhode Island’s participation in the International Coastal Cleanup program, cigarette butts were not the item most collected by volunteer cleanup participants. Instead, small plastic and foam pieces—those pulverized bits you may have noticed accumulated in every wrack line—took the lead. The findings have been published in Save The Bay’s 2023 International Coastal Cleanup Report, officially released today.

The Ocean Conservancy’s International Coastal Cleanup organizes volunteers around the world to collect trash from shores and record what they find. The data is published in an annual report that is a key resource for advocates working to reduce marine debris. Here in Rhode Island, Save The Bay serves as the state coordinator and publishes a local report on Ocean State findings.

“When this project started over 35 years ago, the focus was on recording the most common types of identifiable trash so that we could get a picture of what was littering our shores and where it was coming from,” explained Save The Bay Volunteer and Internship Manager July Lewis. “In terms of the number of items picked up, cigarette butts were always at the top of the list.”

In 2023, however, 2,830 local volunteers collected 23,468 plastic and foam pieces—and 21,165 cigarette butts.

A graph demonstrating the changing trend in collected cigarette butts and plastic pieces in Rhode Island.

In historical terms, plastic litter is relatively new to the shores of Narragansett Bay—notes from Save The Bay’s earliest 1970s cleanups barely mention it. But today, plastic is everywhere and, plastic never really goes away. Instead, it breaks down into smaller and smaller pieces, eventually becoming “microplastics” that contaminate waterbodies.

To account for the growing epidemic of plastic pollution, the Ocean Conservancy added a new category of reporting to its International Coastal Cleanup data cards in 2013: “tiny trash,” the category that is now the frontrunner of collected litter in Rhode Island. The change represents a sea change in the plastic debris problem for Narragansett Bay and beyond.

“Our team has found microplastics in every part of the Bay, and we find them every time we look for them,” said Save The Bay Executive Director Topher Hamblett. “The best thing we can do to stop the plastics problem is to prevent plastic from ever entering our waters—whether you make sure to dispose of your trash properly, volunteer at a shoreline cleanup, or support changes in local policy, like telling your legislators to pass a bottle bill.”

The cover of the 2023 International Coastal Cleanup Rhode Island Report, featuring a photo of two volunteers collecting litter in a coastal buffer, as well as headline and paragraph text.
The Rhode Island International Coastal Cleanup Report can be downloaded at savebay.org/publications.

The complete Rhode Island International Coastal Cleanup Report can be viewed and downloaded from Save The Bay’s website at savebay.org/publications. More information about the changing trend in litter collection as indicated by Rhode Island’s International Coastal Cleanup is available on Save The Bay’s website at savebay.org/plastic-particles-vs-cigarette-butts. Those interested in learning more about Save The Bay’s shoreline cleanup program can visit the organization’s Volunteer Portal.

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