Stemming the Tide of Plastic Marine Litter


A Global Action Agenda

October 1, 2013
|
Katie Mika, Lara Leitner, Mark Gold, Cara Horowitz, Megan Herzog

Pritzker Brief No. 5 | October 2013

An estimated 20 million tons of plastic litter enters the ocean each year. This litter has a wide range of adverse environmental and economic impacts, from wildlife deaths and degraded coral reefs to billions of dollars in cleanup costs, damage to sea vessels, and lost tourism and fisheries revenues. Despite increased attention to the problem and general agreement about the need for reduction and cleanup of marine plastic litter, there is presently no overarching action plan that would effectively address the problem.

This paper, fifth in the Emmett Center's Pritzker Brief series, reviews the universe of studies, policies and international agreements relevant to the problem and provides a suite of recommendations to achieve meaningful reductions in plastic marine litter by the year 2025.

Download publication

News
See All
Sep 19, 2024

Foul Ball: How oil & gas sponsorships pollute major league sports

Read More
Aug 22, 2024

Fueling & Financing: Addressing the Urgent Challenges Facing Electric Heavy-Duty Vehicle Deployment

Read More