OneGreenPlanet
has launched a new campaign taking on plastic pollution. Refuse disposables and crush plastic!
OneGreenPlanet
has launched a new campaign taking on plastic pollution. Refuse disposables and crush plastic!
This Valentine’s Day, make love, not plastic.
Avoid single-use plastic, and support PPC’s work toward a world free of plastic pollution.
Can you go 30 days without drinking from a single-use plastic water bottle?
Take
the REFUSE! pledge.
Watermill Express is a PPC member business.
You must watch this new TEDx Talk by Melati and Isabel Wijsen of Bali, sisters who have worked tirelessly to rid their island home of single-use plastic bags. They are the future, and the future is plastic free!
“Forever is today for our children.
Delete plastic from your world.
Our oceans are death zones, our beaches plastic.
Refuse2Use” - Peter Fonda
#Resolve2Refuse disposable plastic: http://www.plasticpollutioncoalition.org/get-involved
“Join me in going plastic-free this holiday season. Here’s a New Year’s resolution: Let’s get rid of our single-use plastic addiction. Make a contribution to PPC.” – Jeff Bridges
“Happy holidays! It’s a new world again and there is no better way to celebrate forward thinking than to stop playing with single-use plastics. Party into this next year with optimism and make a holiday contribution to PPC!! Wheeeee!” – Mario Batali
“I happily joined the Plastic Pollution Coalition because plastic has got to go. I am so anti-plastic that I don’t have a cell phone or a computer.” - Jonathan Richman, musician
Join Jonathan Richman and #Resolve2Refuse single-use plastic. Get involved.
Our Plastic, Our Problem (A marine litter info-operetta!)
by Seas at Risk
This holiday season, we encourage you to #UseRealStuff & #MakeRealStuff! Reduce your plastic footprint by giving handmade, homemade, or vintage gifts. Will you #Resolve2Refuse single-use plastics in 2016? Join us.
Single use plastic is not so fantastic,
we use it for a minute or two
and then it sits around for a few
thousand years, maybe even more
and then it washes up on the shore.
Just bring your own bag to the store.
- Jack Johnson, Musician and PPC Member
“Plastic pollution shouldn’t be thought of as ‘just’ an environmental issue, because like political and economic injustice it’s actually a human rights issue. Throwaway, single-use culture is unsustainable, and it impacts the poorest, most vulnerable members of society most severely. But unlike taking action against overt and violent kinds of human rights violations, plastic pollution can be greatly reduced by making simple everyday changes to the way we all live our lives; like carrying a reusable water bottle and refusing to use single-use plastic. The time has come to change the way we live, and to spread the word!” - Alfre Woodard, actress and PPC supporter. Get involved.
Race for Water launches traveling exhibit: “Plastic Pollution: from Impact to Solutions.” Read more.
Want to limit the amount of plastic used on your college campus – or in
your home? Download the free Plastic-Free Campus Manual (created by the Post-Landfill Action Network with support from PPC) for more tips.