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  • You've probably seen this video.

  • That's a plastic straw being pulled out of

  • a sea turtle's nose.

  • The video went viral in 2015 sparking a public outcry

  • to "say no to plastic straws."

  • And over the years the campaign has gained traction.

  • Starbucks says by 2020 it will eliminate plastic straws,

  • pivoting to biodegradable straws and a newly designed lid.

  • McDonald's UK, American Airlines, and Marriott Hotels

  • have all announced similar changes.

  • So why do plastic straws suck?

  • Starbucks says, "One of the major issues

  • with plastic straws is that they are too small

  • and lightweight to be captured in modern recycling equipment."

  • We reached out to various recycling plants across North America to see if that was true.

  • While some facilities told us they do recycle straws,

  • two of the largest recycling facilities in the US

  • said its machines don't always catch straws.

  • So they end up in the trash and eventually in landfills.

  • So frustrating.

  • I know.

  • Another place straws tend to end up?

  • Beaches.

  • Dr. George Leonard is the Chief Scientist for Ocean Conservancy.

  • Dr. Leonard: The data from our 2017 international

  • coastal cleanup and there were 643,000 plastic straws

  • that were picked up around beaches and waterways all over the world.

  • To limit the use of straws

  • Starbucks introduced a new lid that resembles a sippy cup.

  • These new lids are made from polypropylene

  • which according to Starbucks can be widely recycled.

  • But there's one major problem.

  • Rachel Sarnoff: You know the objective really was to phase out straws

  • because they're not recyclable.

  • The shift to this lid really increases the amount

  • of plastic that Starbucks is using per cup.

  • I think it could be a part of a solution

  • but I don't think it's the whole picture.

  • Some critics have pointed out that straws only make up a fraction of our plastic waste.

  • So why is everyone so worked up about them?

  • Dr. Leonard: I think straws are a bit of a poster child

  • here for the bigger question of society's kind of

  • over-reliance on single-use plastics and the fact

  • that a lot of the stuff is ending up in our marine environment.

  • All plastics ultimately sort of break down

  • and fracture into smaller and smaller bits of plastic

  • as a result of being tossed around by the waves

  • and then by the fact that sunlight basically

  • makes the plastic brittle.

  • And so they create what we call microplastics.

  • We're finding these flecks of plastic in everything from the forage fish

  • that are at the base of the food web

  • up through the kinds of fish that we end up putting on our dinner plate.

  • If we get the kind of global plastic users

  • and the major brands like Starbucks

  • and some of these other companies like Coca-Cola

  • that everybody knows about to really take ownership of

  • their contribution to this problem

  • and alter their business practices

  • you know they can be real leaders here

  • and they can bring the rest of the plastic supply chain along with them.

  • So how do we start?

  • Sarnoff: We need to be more thoughtful about how we use plastic.

  • Dr. Leonard: We do know that there's about eight million metric tons of plastic overall

  • that ends up in the world's oceans every year

  • and that's kind of thought to be one garbage truck worth per mile of beach per day.

  • About half of that plastic comes from

  • countries in Southeast Asia that don't have formal

  • waste management systems.

  • Dr. Leonard: Much of their local waste

  • is disposed in sort of informal ways

  • whether it's behind the house or at a community dump

  • which is essentially sort of an open pit

  • or in some cases directly dumped into the ocean itself.

  • In countries like the US

  • plastic can also be swept down drains,

  • into rivers leading to the sea.

  • It can be flushed down the toilet

  • or left behind by beachgoers.

  • So what should we be doing differently?

  • For starters pay closer attention to your personal habits.

  • Sarnoff: Get into the habit of bringing our own cup,

  • fork, bag, straw.

  • That's what I have in my bag at all times.

  • Stop flushing things other than human waste and toilet paper down the toilet.

  • And remember, anything that goes down the toilet, drain,

  • or into sewers goes to the ocean.

  • All drains lead to the ocean, kid.

You've probably seen this video.

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