Environmental charity Surfers Against Sewage (SAS) has launched its annual Big Spring Beach Clean campaign, urging the public to take action to tackle plastic pollution from source to sea. 

Already the single biggest community beach clean activation in the UK, the Big Spring Beach Clean engages 20,000 participants annually who, this year, will also be called upon to document and report ‘avoidable plastics’ that they find around the coastline in a mass ‘citizen science’ action. 

Organisers will urge individuals and communities to target ‘avoidable plastics’, helping volunteers to document single-use plastics found on the tideline including cutlery, straws and stirrers, plastic drinks bottles, coffee cups and condiment sachets. 

Participants will be encouraged to use social media to share images of these items using the hashtag #AvoidablePlastics and #PlasticFreeCoastlines. 

This evidence will be used to support upstream solutions to preventing plastic waste as the Government considers taxing avoidable and single-use plastics.

In the last decade, Surfers Against Sewage’s Big Spring Beach Clean has grown into one of the biggest gatherings of environmental volunteers in the world, visiting over 1,200 beaches and removing millions of pieces of plastic from the marine environment. 

SAS head of community and engagement, Dom Ferris, said: “This huge volunteer effort reflects the recent explosion of awareness and action around the issue of ocean plastic pollution that was powerfully demonstrated by the recent Blue Planet II series. 

“Nicknamed the ‘Attenborough Effect’, the series shone an all-encompassing light on the threat that plastic poses to our oceans, leading to a wave of new engagement that can be traced back to ripples generated almost 10 years ago by those pioneer beach clean communities, many of whom are still active with SAS.

“We know that up to 13 million tonnes of plastic enter our oceans every year. 

“We know that millions of animals are dying because of this. We know that plastic is literally suffocating our oceans. 

“Yet, despite this, there is hope and nowhere can that be better felt than on our beaches each spring amongst the tens of thousands of people who have donated their precious time to protect what they love. 

“Today we’re calling for people to lead their communities once again by registering their favourite beaches for a Big Spring Beach Clean!”

Surfers Against Sewage and their volunteers  are working with the Environment Agency to promote the Big Spring Beach Clean, as they focus on innovative solutions to tackle single-use plastic pollution in the wider environment. 

The Environment Agency recently announced £750,000 for a new, dedicated team to tackle plastics pollution in the West Country. 

This pioneer project will see the creation of a new Plastics and Sustainability team that will be working across Devon and Cornwall with businesses, local councils, charities and community action groups, such as Surfers Against Sewage and the Bude Cleaner Seas Project. 

The team will aim to reduce the amount of plastic pollution across land, rivers and the coastline. It will promote better environmental practices across industry, including a reduction in plastic waste from manufacturing, along with community campaigns to clean up pollution locally.

Environment Agency area environment manager, Bruce Newport said: “We share the same passion as Surfers Against Sewage for removing plastic that has been allowed to enter our precious environment, and by working together we will maximise this opportunity to make a massive difference.”