Most people get carried away with smiles when they plant a tree, reject paper goods, and go ‘digital’ in the name of rescuing trees from being cut down. This is when they turn a blind eye to the pollution that rages way under their feet, far away from them at the depth of oceans. Plastic, a product that has made our daily chores so convenient and yet comes with a generational curse of pollution, end up on the ocean bed at 14 million tons per year. It is the most common form of litter in the ocean. According to the IUCN, this plastic accounts for 80 percent of all marine debris discovered from the surface to deep-sea sediments. Plastic litters the shorelines of every continent, with more trash concentrated around popular tourist destinations and densely populated areas. [1]
