Press "Enter" to skip to content

What Are the Most Common Trash Items Found on California Beaches? Here's the List

Visit a California beach and you might notice items scattered along the shoreline that just don’t belong among the sand, waves and marine wildlife.

The environmental group Ocean Conservancy has seen it all when it comes to beach trash, but there are some items that turn up with striking regularity during the group’s annual global beach cleanup events.

And, one item has topped the list of most commonly found trash items for the majority of nearly four decades.

“We’re still seeing same type of single use plastics, packaging, cigarette butts, bottle caps, bags, food takeaway containers,” said Nick Mallos, of Ocean Conservancy.

Here are the top-five items collected on California beaches in Ocean Conservancy’s 2022 report.

No. 5: Plastic beverage bottles (15,784)
No. 4: Metal bottle caps (16,919)
No. 3: Plastic bottle caps (24,949)
No. 2: Food wrappers (68,214)
No. 1: Cigarette butts (125,157)

Cigarette butts, which contain plastic filters, have held the No. 1 spot in all but one of the last 38 years.

Other common items found on the California coast included straws and stirrers (13,291), plastic grocery bags (14,000), glass beverage bottles (10,559) and beverage cans (12,770).

All are items that are briefly used, then discarded.

“Certainly, enjoy your beverages, enjoy your foods,” said Mallos. “Can you make packaging decisions that don’t have an impact if they get lost in the environment? And, then secondly, you usually have a bag with — you take a piece, take five pieces. Just leave the beach a little cleaner than the way you found it.”

California has some of the strongest plastics legislation in the country, including SB 54. The bill — the Plastic Pollution Prevention and Packaging Producer Responsibility Act — signed into law in 2022 marks the culmination of an effort to require all single-use packing to be recyclable or compostable.


Source: NBC Los Angeles

Be First to Comment

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *