Thursday, January 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

PPE, pandemic-related trash on shorelines: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jun, 2021 11:18 AM
  • PPE, pandemic-related trash on shorelines: report

Organizers of a national conservation program aimed at removing trash from the country's many shorelines say the COVID-19 pandemic has even changed how we litter.

The Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup 2020 annual report says litter from single-use food and drink packaging nearly doubled last year as restaurant takeout soared during lockdowns and physical distancing kept people outside and apart.

Julia Wakeling, spokeswoman for the shoreline cleanup, says in a statement that single-use containers jumped from 15.3 per cent of all litter collected in 2019 to nearly 27 per cent last year.

She says masks and other personal protective equipment were also plucked off beaches in 2020, the first time such items had been recorded in the cleanup's 27-year history.

There was no category for masks or disposable gloves on the cards used last year by volunteers tracking the type and amount of trash collected, but Wakeling says a line has been added this year and she expects the tally will be "very interesting."

Cigarette butts still topped the list of the 10 most commonly collected items as the annual report shows 15,000 volunteers removed more than 41,000 kilograms of litter from Canadian shorelines in 2020.

The pandemic forced suspension of planned cleanups for four months last year and resulted in a 70 per cent drop in participation, but organizers say they expect to see a rebound.

"Armed with COVID-safe cleanup guidelines, Shoreline Cleanup hopes to make up for lost numbers in 2021 and encourages all Canadians to organize or participate in a physically distanced cleanup," says the statement from the conservation partnership between Vancouver-based Ocean Wise and the World Wildlife Fund Canada.

Megan Leslie, WWF-Canada's president and CEO, is grateful for the efforts of cleanup volunteers and hopes more Canadians will register at ShorelineCleanup.ca to help fish, birds, turtles and other wildlife that often mistake garbage for food or become entangled in it.

“Every piece of garbage we remove from our freshwater and marine shorelines is one less piece that can harm wildlife," Leslie says in the release.

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman allegedly threatens security guard with stun baton

Woman allegedly threatens security guard with stun baton
She was wearing a beige trench coat with fur lining, a blue and white sweater, orange scarf, black leather pants, and black and white runners and carrying a blue and brown bag.

Woman allegedly threatens security guard with stun baton

Vaccine hesitancy major risk, doctors say

Vaccine hesitancy major risk, doctors say
Canada's small supply of vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech will shrink even more over the next four weeks as the company slows production while upgrading its facility in Belgium.

Vaccine hesitancy major risk, doctors say

Warning in northern B.C. about illicit drug mix

Warning in northern B.C. about illicit drug mix
The alert says users of drugs contaminated with benzos might be difficult to rouse and could also be slow to respond to naloxone, the drug that reverses opioid overdoses.

Warning in northern B.C. about illicit drug mix

Reformed fiscal stabilization to cost $4.5B: PBO

Reformed fiscal stabilization to cost $4.5B: PBO
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced a major change to the program in the government's fall economic update.

Reformed fiscal stabilization to cost $4.5B: PBO

Prominent Canadians on the Biden-Harris inauguration

Prominent Canadians on the Biden-Harris inauguration
We will continue this partnership as we fight the global COVID-19 pandemic and support a sustainable economic recovery that will build back better for everyone.

Prominent Canadians on the Biden-Harris inauguration

Bank of Canada keeps interest rate on hold

Bank of Canada keeps interest rate on hold
Governor Tiff Macklem, in his opening remarks at a late-morning news conference, warned the first-quarter decline could be worse than expected if restrictions are tightened or extended.

Bank of Canada keeps interest rate on hold