Melburnian1
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2013
- Posts
- 25,483
Australian governments and companies increasingly like to virtue signal, but not take substantive steps to fix problems.
Most plastics found in the ocean - a real problem that kills pelagics - come from about 10 river systems worldwide, and nations like mainland China, Vietnam, Indonesia and Philippines that have lengthy coastlines are also big contributors. In contrast, any problem doesn't seem to occur much in (so called) developed nations like Oz.
VA is removing plastic straws and substituting with (wait for it) paper straws and bamboo stirrers.
Yet the bigger picture is that the international recycling market has collapsed (at least for plastics and glass) due to mainland China no longer accepting these, and also how glass is cheap to manufacture in Asia and import to Oz.
VA doesn't separate its rubbish/recyclables on board, or at any point. Admittedly, it has very limited space on board even in galleys, but this would be a more practical step (assuming that eventually the 'recyclables' will be again able to be reprocessed).
This sort of rubbishy dark green/leftie virtue signalling shows how it's become the new quasi-religion.
If VA was really concerned about the health of oceans it would with its part owners in mainland China institute river clean up programs and proper rubbish collection (and landfills) in developing nations like close to home Indonesia and Philippines. That would be effective, instead of removing plastic straws from passengers.
Most plastics found in the ocean - a real problem that kills pelagics - come from about 10 river systems worldwide, and nations like mainland China, Vietnam, Indonesia and Philippines that have lengthy coastlines are also big contributors. In contrast, any problem doesn't seem to occur much in (so called) developed nations like Oz.
VA is removing plastic straws and substituting with (wait for it) paper straws and bamboo stirrers.
Yet the bigger picture is that the international recycling market has collapsed (at least for plastics and glass) due to mainland China no longer accepting these, and also how glass is cheap to manufacture in Asia and import to Oz.
VA doesn't separate its rubbish/recyclables on board, or at any point. Admittedly, it has very limited space on board even in galleys, but this would be a more practical step (assuming that eventually the 'recyclables' will be again able to be reprocessed).
This sort of rubbishy dark green/leftie virtue signalling shows how it's become the new quasi-religion.
If VA was really concerned about the health of oceans it would with its part owners in mainland China institute river clean up programs and proper rubbish collection (and landfills) in developing nations like close to home Indonesia and Philippines. That would be effective, instead of removing plastic straws from passengers.