Friday, 29 Nov 2024

Joanna Lumley calls for urgent laws to combat single-use plastics

Joanna Lumley calls for urgent laws to combat single-use plastics amid fears Covid pandemic made the crisis worse

  • Joanna Lumley is backing Brita environmental campaign to tackle plastic waste
  • She never throws her PPE masks away and that she uses a bar of soap not bottle 
  • The Daily Mail lead a Turn The Tide On Plastic campaign, fighting against plastic

Joanna Lumley yesterday called for laws to combat single-use plastics amid fears the pandemic has made the waste crisis worse.

The actress said she never throws her PPE masks away and that she uses a bar of soap instead of hand sanitiser to cut litter.

She added that ‘doing something good every day, like not throwing plastic away, not buying plastic in the first place’ can make a change.

Miss Lumley, 74, is backing a Brita campaign to highlight how small changes can make a big environmental impact

Lumley, said: ‘The normal ways of doing things are the hardest things to shift, it’s not like people want to go on behaving in a way that is now being criticised, it’s just that it’s the normal way of doing it.’

Miss Lumley, 74, who is backing a Brita campaign to highlight how small changes can make a big environmental impact, said: ‘I would think all the time “What would David Attenborough say?” I’m not saying turn into a virtuous person overnight but just say please make an effort.’

It came as a report by the Scottish Marine Animal Strandings Scheme into the beaching of a 26-ton sperm whale in Harris in 2019 found 220lb of litter in its stomach, such as plastic cups, bags, ropes and netting.

The Daily Mail has been leading a Turn The Tide On Plastic campaign, fighting against plastic waste.

Addressing the effects of the pandemic, Miss Lumley said: ‘There is a limit to what we can continue saying about Covid, we have all been affected by it.

‘We have all been in lockdown, we have all had lockdown fever, we have all various good or bad or indeed terribly sad and tragic times but there is not much more we can say about it and I think one of the ways to lift depression is to think about the good thing you can do.

‘You think the whole problem of excess plastic is too big for me to tangle with but the truth is, I’ve found this all the way through my life, is if you can make an effort, and it is making an effort, and do something good every day, like not throwing plastic away, not buying plastic in the first place, if you can make an effort towards looking after what is our only home.

‘It’s exciting to think what could I do? And the first thing you can do is to get the water out of the tap.

‘I’ve just been doing some work with a charity in Darfur where the little children walk up to 14 miles a day to get water and you think honestly we have got it pouring out of the taps so let’s treat the fresh sweet water we have got with respect and don’t waste your money on bottled water.’

Lumley, said: ‘The normal ways of doing things are the hardest things to shift, it’s not like people want to go on behaving in a way that is now being criticised, it’s just that it’s the normal way of doing it.

‘Things are automatically wrapped up in cellophane or sealed in a plastic bag, when it doesn’t need to be in plastic bag but there is it, and all those things are very hard to change and I think a lot of it must come through legislation.

‘If things were made law it would make such a huge difference. If manufacturers and suppliers were not allowed to wrap their things in plastic which can’t be processed and had to use that starch by-product, that would be absolutely brilliant.

‘It might cost a bit more to begin with but the more people who use it, the easier it will be to bring the price down and therefore to make it accessible for all our goods.

‘I think it needs an effort and I know this pandemic has left a lot of people, including me sometimes, thinking “What’s the point? It’s all so tiring, it’s so dreary and we don’t quite know when we come out of lockdown what we will be able to do and everything is a bore,” but I promise you, try to do something good and you won’t feel quite so depressed.’

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