Three-quarters of Swiss believe their country has a plastic problem, with a quarter seeing the problem as “massive”. They are particularly concerned about plastic pollution in the oceans and on beaches.
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A Suíça tem um problema de plástico, diz a maioria dos suíços
This is the result of a surveyExternal link published on Monday by OceanCare, a Swiss-based marine conservation NGO. It found that the Swiss see the biggest problem with plastic packaging. Double packaging in particular is considered unnecessary (according to 34% of respondents), and in general there is “too much packaging” (30%).
The survey also showed that the issue of plastic is of particular concern to the older generation, unlike most public climate debates, which are strongly driven by younger people.
“Plastic pollution is increasingly affecting life in Switzerland. Microplastics are already found in large quantities in the snow in the Alps, in our soils and water,” says Fabienne McLellan, managing director and lead of the plastics programme at OceanCare.
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Nanoplastics travel long distances to the Alps
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The Swiss are particularly concerned about plastic waste in the oceans and on beaches. Normally in surveys “the closer the problem, the greater the concern”, the study authors wrote. However, the opposite is true when it comes to plastic: 73% of the Swiss perceive plastic in the sea and on beaches as more problematic than plastic in Swiss nature. “This awareness of the problem cuts across all political camps from left to right and cannot be dismissed as a classic ‘eco-issue’,” they said.
Plastic pollution of Swiss nature worries only half of those surveyed (54%), and plastic in local drinking water even fewer people (43%). “Interestingly, people living in the countryside, who are in more direct contact with nature, rate these issues very similarly to urban residents,” the study said.
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Swiss to keep sipping from single-use plastics as EU ban takes effect
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Single-use plastic items like straws and cups are no longer allowed in much of Europe. Not so in Switzerland.
More than half of the Swiss would like to see tough measures and interventions by law “to ban microplastics from consumer goods, to curb plastic production in general and to sensibly reduce the consumption of single-use plastic”.
According to Oceancare, around nine million tonnes of plastic end up in the world’s oceans every year – around 17,600 tonnes in the Mediterranean alone.
The survey was part of a large-scale initiative by OceanCare to reduce plastic in Switzerland. The study, conducted by gfs.bern surveyed 1,013 Swiss residents, proportioned according to age, gender and language region. The representative survey took place between June 20 and July 3, 2022.
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Why don’t the Swiss recycle more plastic?
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For 30 days, swissinfo.ch journalist Susan Misicka saved all of her plastic garbage, but found that not even half of it could be recycled.
Beer sales in Switzerland watered down by bad weather
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The past brewing year fell through in Switzerland, partly due to the bad weather. Beer sales shrank again. For the first time, per capita consumption fell below the 50 liter mark.
Compensation for Syrian after pregnant wife denied help on Swiss train
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Switzerland’s Federal Court has partially upheld the appeal of a Syrian family being deported from Switzerland to Italy in 2014. The man now also receives compensation.
Swiss-EU negotiations: Cassis to meet Sefcovic in Bern
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Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis will meet the Vice-President of the EU Commission, Maros Sefcovic, in Bern on Wednesday.
Heavy snowfall in Switzerland causes traffic chaos and accidents
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The heavy snowfall late on Thursday and during the night into Friday led to traffic chaos and many accidents in many regions of Switzerland.
Chimpanzee behaviours passed down through generations
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More than 600,000 rounds of Swiss sniper ammunition reach Ukraine
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Switzerland launches national digital inclusion alliance
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The Swiss government launched the Swiss Digital Inclusion Alliance on Thursday with the goal of giving as many people as possible access to digital services.
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.
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Large volumes of microplastics exist in Lake Geneva
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A recent analysis by the Oceaneye group shows that Lake Geneva contains large quantities of plastic waste smaller than 20 centimetres.
The world has taken a step toward ending plastic pollution. Now let’s seize the moment.
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An agreement to initiate negotiations on a legally-binding plastics pollution treaty is historic. But more urgent action is needed, says WWF boss.
Swiss cities given mixed ratings for recycling plastic packaging
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Efforts to improve plastic recycling in Switzerland have shown a mixed bag of results among cities and towns, ranging from “exemplary” to “no significant effort”.
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If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.