
Pupils help Greenpeace and MCS clean a beach on the Isle of Mull, UK © Will Rose / Greenpeace
Now we’re taking the next big step. We’re setting an ambitious new goal: A Million Acts of Blue.
What is an Act of Blue?
An Act of Blue is any action that helps to stop single-use plastic from being created in the first place.
It’s inspired by love for our amazing blue planet and the urgent need to protect our oceans, waterways, landscapes and communities. It aims to hold corporations accountable for the plastic pollution crisis they helped to create.

Plastic in the ocean is affecting marine wildlife © Troy Mayne / Oceanic Imagery Publications | Source: Greenpeace International
Ways to create change in your community
We’ve created a comprehensive guide to creating change in your community with several kinds of actions you can take. These range from learning and sharing your passion for this issue to passing legislation in your city. Get started today to create a plastic-free future!
1. Learn, share, and join in
The first step towards action is knowledge. Are you a member of a community group that is eager to learn more about how they can protect our oceans and communities? Maybe your child’s teacher is looking for ways to teach kids about environmental protection?
Our toolkit has powerpoints and tips for giving a presentation — you can even host a movie night!
2. Be heard in the media
If you want to make a change in your community, start with local media! Local newspapers, blogs and magazines are a great way to get the word out. In the toolkit, we walk you through how to write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper and how to get it published.
3. Help create plastic-free supermarkets and restaurants
Nowhere is the dominance of single-use plastics and wasteful packaging more obvious than at your local supermarket. Make waves in your community by working to get a local supermarket to reduce their use of single-use plastics.
4. Get restaurants to ditch single-use plastics
Fed up with all the plastic straws and utensils at fast food places and cafes? Join the growing movement urging establishments to get rid of throwaway plastic products.
5. Lobby for local legislation
All over the world, towns, cities, and villages are standing up for a plastic-free future by implementing local bans and laws restricting the use of throwaway plastic. Be part of this movement by working with your neighbours to get your local government to do the same.
6. Organize a local cleanup
Everyone loves a cleanup event, so why not take it to the next level? Get your community together to clean up a local beach, park, or riverbank — but don’t stop there. Go through the single-use plastics collected and identify which companies produced them. Let’s hold corporations responsible for their plastic waste!
7. Start a community group
You don’t have to go it alone. We have a lot of work to do, and we’ll get a lot further, and have more fun, if we do it together. Get some friends and neighbours together for a plastic-free future!

Mull Beach Clean at Kilninian Beach with pupils from Ulver Primary School, Isle Of Mull. © Will Rose / Greenpeace
Excited to get started? Check out the full Million Acts of Blue toolkit to find out more about how you can work in your own community to end single-use plastics.
*Jen Fela is the Global Engagement Specialist for the plastics project based in Greenpeace USA
Jen Fela’s article was published in Greenpeace International. Go to ORIGINAL.
Read also:
Over 1 Million People Demand Corporations Reduce Single-Use Plastics ahead of Earth Day
World Campaign to Clean Torrents of Plastic Dumped in the Oceans
More Plastic than Fish or How Politicians Help Ocean Destruction
UN Declares War on Ocean Plastic
How China’s Ban of Plastic Waste Imports Can Help Beat Pollution
Biodegradable Plastics Are Not the Answer to Reducing Marine Litter – UN
Every Single Piece of Plastic Ever Made Still exists. Here’s the Story
World Dumps the Equivalent of One Garbage Truck of Plastic in Oceans, Every Minute
READ MORE HERE
2018 Human Wrongs Watch
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