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ADVISORY: Ocean Conservancy Celebrates World’s Largest Beach Cleanup at Flagship Seattle Event on Saturday, September 21

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International Coastal Cleanup Media Kit Here

SPOKANE, Wash. – Ocean Conservancy, a national environmental NGO headquartered in Washington, D.C., and with offices in Bellingham and other coastal cities across the country, is partnering with Puget Soundkeeper to bring its flagship International Coastal Cleanup® (ICC) event to Seattle. Volunteers are invited to join the world’s largest beach and waterway cleanup movement at Statue of Liberty Plaza at Alki Beach on September 21, 2024. Breakfast, lunch, and cleanup supplies will be provided.

“Over a garbage truck’s worth of plastics – much of it single-use – enters the ocean every minute, where they accumulate year after year,” said Ocean Conservancy’s Senior Director of Conservation Cleanups, Allison Schutes. “While it’s critical that we turn off the tap of plastics flowing into the environment through prevention measures, we also need to clean up what’s already out there. Every piece of plastic collected and recorded as part of the International Coastal Cleanup informs important research and advocacy and makes a tangible difference for our ocean and the creatures that call it home.”

“We’re incredibly proud to be partnering with Ocean Conservancy on this flagship cleanup at one of the most iconic beaches in the Pacific Northwest,” said Sean Dixon, Executive Director of Puget Soundkeeper, which is celebrating its 40th Anniversary in 2024. “This year’s event will bring families, neighbors, activists, and community champions out to help safeguard this vital ecosystem. Plastics in our environment are superhighways transporting toxic chemicals into the food web and, especially during salmon migrations, are a literal poison pill for our already endangered and threatened fisheries. Every little piece of trash collected helps save a salmon.”

Partners in Washington state have been participating in Ocean Conservancy’s ICC for 36 years. Since 2019, in the Puget Sound area alone, nearly 9,000 volunteers have removed close to 200,000 individual pieces of trash, weighing a whopping 75,000 pounds. Meanwhile, Washington state has been at the forefront of plastics policy. The state has banned plastic foam foodware, including clamshell containers, plates and cups, as well as single-use foam coolers and packing peanuts; and last year, Governor Jay Inslee signed into law legislation designed to reduce single-use water bottles, other plastic packaging, and plastic foam docks.

“Washington state has been among the most proactive in the country in terms of addressing plastic pollution, and Seattle is world-renown for its iconic Pacific vistas, so hosting a flagship event here made perfect sense,” said Dr. Anja Brandon, a Seattle native and environmental engineer who serves as Ocean Conservancy’s Director of Plastics Policy. “I fell in love with the ocean in Seattle, and I’m proud of everything Washingtonians are doing to make change for our ocean.”

Globally, since the first ICC in 1986, over 18 million volunteers have joined local cleanup efforts big and small to remove over 385 million pounds of trash from beaches and waterways, making it the largest beach and waterway cleanup in the world. At last year’s ICC, over 486,000 volunteers collected nearly 8 million pounds of trash globally, including nearly 2 million cigarette butts, over 1.3 million beverage bottles, and over 850,000 bottle caps. Ocean Conservancy is expecting an even larger turnout in 2024.

Every year, more than 11 million metric tons of plastic waste are estimated to enter the ocean, impacting more than 1,300 species of marine life, including seabirds, sea turtles and marine mammals. Plastics never fully breakdown in the environment and instead, break into smaller and smaller pieces called microplastics. Microplastics are being found everywhere scientists look, from the depths of the Mariana trench to mountain tops, and even our dinner tables, showing up in proteins, salt, and even drinking water.

In addition to the direct benefit of removing trash from the environment, the data collected by ICC volunteers using the Clean Swell app or data sheets contributes to Ocean Conservancy’s marine litter database. This database is the world’s largest repository of marine debris data and is used to inform scientists, conservation groups, governments, and industry leaders about ocean trash and support plastic pollution prevention and advocacy efforts. ICC data have been instrumental in spurring policy change from being used to promote California’s SB 54, Florida’s ban on balloon releases, and the national Farewell to Foam Act, and to advocate for source reduction in the upcoming plastics treaty.

WHOMembers of Ocean Conservancy’s ocean plastics program, including:
– Vice President of Conservation, Nicholas Mallos
– Senior Director of Conservation Cleanups, Allison Schutes Director of Plastics Policy
– Dr. Anja Brandon, who is also an environmental engineer

Hundreds of local volunteers
WHATFlagship event of the International Coastal Cleanup® (ICC), where volunteers help protect sensitive habitats and marine life while contributing to cutting edge plastic pollution research and data that support policy change.

Timeline:
– Breakfast
– A short speaking program
– Cleanup with all materials – including a t-shirt — provided
– Lunch
WHENSaturday, September 21, 2024, 9AM-12PM PT
WHEREStatue of Liberty Plaza
Alki Beach, Seattle

Volunteers can register on Eventbrite and will receive cleanup supplies and t-shirts. Breakfast and lunch will be provided.

If you would like to set up an interview with one of Ocean Conservancy’s experts or RSVP to cover the Seattle ICC, please contact Jordana Lewis at [email protected] or 301.873.4484.

The International Coastal Cleanup media kit with photos, b-roll and data can be found HERE.

You can find a two pager with topline data from the 2023 ICC HERE.

You can find the full 2023 ICC report HERE.

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ABOUT OCEAN CONSERVANCY 

Ocean Conservancy is working to protect the ocean from today’s greatest global challenges. Together with our partners, we create evidence-based solutions for a healthy ocean and the wildlife and communities that depend on it. For more information, visit oceanconservancy.org, or follow us on Facebook, X (formerly Twitter) or Instagram. 

Media Contact

Jordana Lewis

301.873.4484

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