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Plastic pollution on Australia’s coasts has decreased by 29% since 2013

<p>Plastic pollution is an escalating global problem. Australia now produces 2.5 million tonnes of plastic waste each year, while world-wide production is expected to double by 2040.</p> <p>This pollution doesn’t just accumulate on our beaches: it can be found on land and other marine environments (heard of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch?)</p> <p>But according to a new study by Australia’s national science agency, CSIRO, plastic pollution on Australia’s coasts has decreased by 29% since 2013.</p> <p>The study, which assessed waste reduction efforts in Australia and their effect on coastal pollution, highlights that although Australia’s plastic use has remained constant since 2013, local governments are getting better at preventing and cleaning up pollution.</p> <p>“Our research set out to identify the local government approaches that have been most effective in reducing coastal plastics and identify the underlying behaviours that can lead to the greatest reduction in plastic pollution,” says lead researcher Dr Kathryn Willis, a recent PhD graduate from the University of Tasmania.</p> <p>“Whilst plastic pollution is still a global crisis and we still have a long way to go, this research shows that decisions made on the ground, at local management levels, are crucial for the successful reduction of coastal plastic pollution,” she adds.</p> <p>The study has been published in One Earth.</p> <p><strong>Local government approaches work</strong></p> <p>The new research builds upon extensive 2013 CSIRO coastal litter surveys with 563 new surveys and interviews with waste managers across 32 local governments around Australia completed in 2019.</p> <p>The results found that, although there was a decrease in the overall national average coastal pollution by 29%, some surveyed municipalities showed an increase in local litter by up to 93%, while others decreased by up to 73%.</p> <p>Since global plastic pollution is driven by waste reduction strategies at a local level (regardless of where the pollution originates), researchers then focused on identifying which local government approaches had the greatest effect on these levels of coastal pollution.</p> <p>To do this they sorted local government waste management actions into three categories of human behaviour, including:</p> <p><strong>Planned behaviour – </strong>strategies like recycling guides, information and education programs, and voluntary clean-up initiatives.</p> <p><strong>Crime prevention –</strong> waste management strategies like illegal dumping surveillance and beach cleaning by local governments.</p> <p><strong>Economic – </strong>actions like kerb-side waste and recycling collection, hard waste collections and shopping bag bans.</p> <p>They found that retaining and maintaining efforts in economic waste management strategies had the largest effect on reducing coastal litter.</p> <p>“For example, household collection services, where there are multiple waste and recycling streams, makes it easier for community members to separate and discard their waste appropriately,” says co-author Dr Denise Hardesty, a principal research scientist at CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere.</p> <p>“Our research showed that increases in waste levies had the second largest effect on decreases in coastal plastic pollution. Local governments are moving away from a collect and dump mindset to a sort and improve approach,” adds Hardesty.</p> <p>Clean-up activities, such as Clean Up Australia Day, and surveillance programs that directly involved members of the community were also effective.</p> <p>“Increasing community stewardship of the local environment and beaches has huge benefits. Not only does our coastline become cleaner, but people are more inclined to look out for bad behaviour, even using dumping hotlines to report illegal polluting activity,” says Hardesty.</p> <p><strong>Another piece of the solution to our plastics problem</strong></p> <p>This isn’t the be-all and end-all solution to Australia’s plastics problem – let alone globally – but this research does provide decision-makers with empirical evidence that the choices made by municipal waste managers and policymakers are linked to reductions in plastic pollution in the environment.</p> <p>Identifying the most effective approaches for reducing coastal litter is an important part of future plastic pollution reduction strategies. The CSIRO’s Ending Plastic Waste Mission is aiming for an 80% reduction in plastic waste entering the Australian environment by 2030.</p> <p>“While we still have a long way to go, and the technical challenges are enormous, these early results show that when we each play to our individual strengths, from community groups, industry, government and research organisations, and we take the field as Team Australia, then we can win,” says Dr Larry Marshall, chief executive of CSIRO.</p> <p><em><strong>This article originally appeared on <a href="https://cosmosmagazine.com/earth/australia-coastal-plastic-pollution/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">cosmosmagazine.com</a> and was written by Imma Perfetto.</strong></em></p> <p><em>Image: Shutterstock</em></p>

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Star opens up on Oscar Pistorius and Reeva Steenkamp "love triangle" saga

<p>South African rugby star Francois Hougaard has opened up on the long-running rumours that a text message that he sent to Reeva Steenkamp sparked her brutal murder, which was done by Paralympic star Oscar Pistorius six years ago.</p> <p>Steenkamp was shot dead by Pistorius through the bathroom door of his home in the early hours of Valentine’s Day in 2013.</p> <p>Pistorius is serving a prison sentence of more than 13 years for her murder.</p> <p><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px; display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7826314/oscar-story.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/2b43dee2c4274ecba0371595573c9e99" /></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em>Oscar Pistorius in court</em></p> <p>Now, Hougaard has opened up about how he was put in the middle of the media inquest in 2013 due to reports that claimed a text he sent was the catalyst of the murder.</p> <p>Hougaard told <a rel="noopener" href="https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/rugbyunion/article-6967451/Francois-Hougaard-business-tattoos-death-former-girlfriend.html" target="_blank"><em>The Daily Mail</em></a>: </p> <p>“Reeva and I dated for quite a while.</p> <p>“One of my best mates phoned me at seven o’clock when I was playing golf to tell me what had happened. He was the first to get to the house. It’s a shock when you hear something like that, isn’t it? It’s tough.</p> <p>“Everyone was saying I sent Reeva a message and that’s why he shot her. I had nothing to do with her any more but it’s all people were asking me about. Mentally, that was a really tough thing to go through.”</p> <p>Hougaard, 31, was involved in the lengthy court case and shared how he stopped the mental pressure from impacting his performance as a rugby player.</p> <p><img style="width: 500px; height: 281.25px; display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;" src="https://oversixtydev.blob.core.windows.net/media/7826313/oscar-story-1.jpg" alt="" data-udi="umb://media/59f1ad1e691d4936b6a6867311457167" /></p> <p style="text-align: center;"><em>Francois Hougaard</em></p> <p>“It was tough because rugby is 80 per cent mental. If you’re not mentally where you need to be, then you’re not going to play well,” he said.</p> <p>“I went to see a psychologist to talk about it. That taught me to deal with negative situations. That taught me to turn things into positive fuel and not to sulk.</p> <p>“When you’re young, you might wake up with a sore shoulder and think, ‘Ah, I’m not really keen for training.’ Once something really seriously bad happens, it just adds some perspective. You don’t sulk about getting dropped or a niggle. It makes you appreciate what you’ve got.”</p>

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Michael Schumacher “spotted” in Majorca for first time since 2013

<p>Formula One legend Michael Schumacher has been spotted recovering from his devastating skiing injury in his holiday home in Majorca.</p> <p>Schumacher has not been seen in public since 2013, after a horrific skiing accident left him in a coma for five years.</p> <p>The Formula One legend had people thinking he was being taken care of in his home in Switzerland ahead of a permanent move to Majorca, but it appears he’s spent the holidays at the luxury villa he owns before heading back to his home in Lake Geneva.</p> <p>Schumacher spent Christmas, New Year's and his milestone 50th birthday in Majorca.</p> <p>He was spotted arriving on a helicopter at Port D'Andratx in Majorca, German magazine <a href="https://www.bunte.de/stars/star-life/schicksalsgeschichten-der-stars/michael-schumacher-verrat-corinna.html">Bunte</a> reported.</p> <p>The villa that Schumacher was taken to in the Spanish island’s mountains features two swimming pools, a large garden and a helipad.</p> <p>Schumacher’s family have dismissed suggestions he’s relocating to the island and have said that they’ve bought the home as a holiday home.</p> <p>A German archbishop last month had seen the Formula One legend, saying that he looked the same, but his face had “become a little fuller”.</p> <p>He also approved of the family’s tenacity to keep Schumacher out of the eyes of the public.</p> <p>Georg Ganswein told <a href="https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/1093841/michael-schumacher-latest-news-majorca-holiday-villa-formula-one-f1">The Express</a> that Schumacher himself “senses that loving people are around him, caring for him and keeping the overly curious public away”.</p> <p>His family have kept his health battle extremely private and have said repeatedly that it is not a matter for the public.</p>

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