Norway to spend £12m on marine pollution fight

Waste on sea

NORWAY is to  provide 130 million kroners (almost £12-million sterling) to help fight marine pollution from discarded plastic which is affecting fishing grounds and coastal areas. .
The  Minister of International Development Nikolai Astrup, said: “Unless the world changes course, there is a risk that there will be more plastic than fish in the sea 30 years from now. Our development programme is a key contribution to efforts to prevent plastic and other litter from developing countries from ending up in the sea.
\’Norway is playing a leading role in the global effort to eliminate marine litter.  This programme is a key element of the Government\’s general focus on the oceans, and an important contribution to the global efforts for clean and healthy oceans..”
Every year, an estimated eight million tonnes of plastic waste enters the world\’s oceans. This volume is expected to double by 2030 and quadruple by 2050. Around 80-90 per cent % of the waste originates on land. In many developing countries, particularly those that are experiencing rapid economic growth, waste quantities are increasing but there are no proper waste management systems that can prevent plastic waste from ending up in the sea.
In its  revised 2018 budget, the Government is proposing an increase of NOK 130 million in funding for the development programme to combat marine litter. This will nearly double the allocation to the programme, to NOK 280 million in 2018.
Minister Astrup added: “Taking the lead in this field also means persuading others to follow. As part of the development programme, the Government has therefore taken the initiative for a World Bank multi-donor trust fund to combat marine litter. This fund will support the development of sustainable waste management systems in developing countries. I have been talking to the World Bank and to potential donors, both other countries and private businesses, about the fund. So far the responses have been positive. “
“The increase in government funding for clean and healthy seas is an important Norwegian contribution to efforts to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.”

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