Scottish teenager’s petition on single-use plastics wins support in parliament

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A petition by a schoolgirl on a remote island calling on the Scottish government to ban all single-use plastics has received more than 26,000 signatures and the backing of MSPs in the Highlands and Islands.

Tabby Fletcher, a 17-year-old from the Isle of Jura, off the west coast of Scotland, launched the petition after seeing dead birds, their bodies entangled in plastic, among piles of waste washed up on Jura’s beaches after a powerful storm.

“I’ve seen so much change already in my lifetime,” said Tabby. “So much plastic, so many gales and storms.

“In January, we had Storm Éowyn,” she said. “Huge storm surges brought piles of plastic on to the beach close to my house. I saw dead birds wrapped in plastic. It was obvious from little bits inside their decomposing bodies they had eaten plastic.

A stag with big orange and red plastic hanging off its antlers as two men hold the animal down
Islanders untangling fishing floats from a stag’s antlers on Jura. Photograph: Tabby Fletcher

“There was a dead goat too – its head stuck in a plastic fishing net. It’s really horrible.”

She has also seen images of red deer, which feed on seaweed, entangled in washed-up fishing nets.

“If they are left to their own devices, they can starve to death. There are fibres of plastic that come off the netting too,” she said.

“Around 50% of the plastic we use in the UK is single use, and by cutting these items out, it creates a more sustainable footprint in the natural world.”

Plastic endangers seabirds, seals and other wildlife through ingestion, entanglement and toxic contamination, while microplastics – tiny particles from broken-down plastic – pose a long-term threat to wildlife and human health. It can contain any of more than 16,000 chemicals, many of them linked to health issues.

The teenager said that although her community organised beach clean-ups, plastic pollution was a growing problem that would only worsen unless action was taken nationally.

“I’m from a very small community. You don’t get to aim big when you are somewhere small,” she said. “So it’s good to see people writing to me and having the same thoughts and beliefs as I have.

“I’m hoping that Scotland will become the first country in the UK to ban single-use plastics. At the very least, we should have a conversation to prove that it is possible.”

She chose to focus on single-use plastic, rather than the plastic fishing nets or “ghost gear” that make up 20% of marine plastic pollution, because the Scottish government has already proposed introducing measures to tackle waste fishing equipment.

A small bay with two people and dogs standing amid lots of plastic rubbish, such as traffic cones, jerrycans and floats
Plastic flotsam and jetsam washed up in Jura. Photograph: Courtesy of Tabby Fletcher

The amount of single-use plastic collected on beaches in the UK and the Channel Islands was up 9.5% in 2024, compared with 2023, according to the Marine Conservation Society’s annual State of our Beaches report.

Tabby’s petition will be discussed on 24 September by a petitions committee of MSPs. Next steps could include recommending wider debate, a short inquiry or recommending government actions.

MSPs for the Highlands and Islands say Tabby’s concerns echo those of their constituents.

Emma Roddick, a Scottish National party MSP for the region, said she supported the petition. “The government could be doing more,” she said. “It’s nice to see a young person taking action like this.”

Roddick said she had heard from constituents on the islands of Eigg and Skye and the Knoydart peninsula about “tiny threads” of plastic washing up on beaches, adding that these were very difficult for communities to clean up.

A blanket ban, however, would be difficult to implement, she said. “For instance, in the NHS, there are plastic items we haven’t found a substitute for. It is also difficult for the government to ban anything we don’t have absolute power over.”

Ariane Burgess, Green MSP for Highlands and Islands, said she was “incredibly impressed” by Tabby’s campaign and fully supported her petition. “The amount of plastic waste washing up on coastal communities’ shore is overwhelming,” she said.

Kim Pratt, circular economy campaigner at Friends of the Earth Scotland, said: “The first thing the government needs to do is to enforce the existing ban

“The Scottish government has banned some single-use plastics, such as cutlery, plates and expanded-polystyrene food containers, but it is not enforced,” she said. “Creating a ban without acting on it is meaningless.”

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