Negotiations are going forward with the United Nations in Ottawa this week for a treaty addressing the global wave of plastic pollution. But will it work?
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Our lawsuit against ten major companies, who pollute our oceans with plastics, is taking another step forward. A revised complaint has been filed with the judge, and we await his decision for going forward with a trial.
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Sometimes whales and dolphins don't stay in the ocean, but come up on shore. Why do they do this, as individuals and sometimes as whole pods of animals? There are many reasons, but too often such strandings end in tragedy.
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A new study, based on interviews with fishermen, estimates that 2% of plastic fishing gear (nets and lines) is lost every year in our oceans. Some of this gear winds up continuing to entangle fish, marine mammals, and other marine life.
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Drift gillnets are particularly destructive to whales, dolphins, sea turtles and sharks, as they are non-discriminatory and entangle many species that encounter them. Most gillnet fisheries in the US have been shut down, but IMMP is seeking an end to the shark/swordfish drift gillnet fishery based in Southern California.
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Read our Opinion Editorial in "The Hill" Newspaper about the Plastics Plague.
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A judge in California court allowed our landmark lawsuit against ten major companies responsible for plastic pollution to move forward, once again thwarting efforts of those companies to block our case and break the case up into different states around the country.
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An entangled humpback whale was freed of the plastic gill net that was killing it, but the whale washed up dead a few days later. Plastic gill nets must be banned.
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Plastic is everywhere in the ocean environment, even in the deepest oceans and most remote islands. The harm to marine life is growing. Congress now has a chance to take action on the Break Free from Plastic Pollution Act. You can help!
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For 40 years, the International Marine Mammal Project has been working to protect whales, dolphins, and their ocean homes.
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