For many of us, the July Fourth holiday means soaking up sunshine at the beach and enjoying fireworks over the ocean. But once the festivities have finished, we are left with a less-than festive sight – trash covering our beloved beaches. So much trash is left behind that the fifth of July has been dubbed “the dirtiest beach day of the year.” From single-use plastic foodware and beverage bottles to firework casings and sparkler packaging, our coasts and beaches are littered with the remnants of the day before. The Surfrider Foundation knows things can be better, which is why we work to clean up the trash on the fifth of July and fight year round to prevent single-use plastics from polluting our beaches in the first place.
But Surfrider doesn’t just clean the beach on the fifth of July – we host cleanups all year long. Over the last decade, over 150,000 coastal activists have removed more than 1 million pounds of trash and recycling from our beaches. With over 1,000 cleanups happening each year, hundreds of thousands of pounds of trash are being picked up and cataloged in Surfrider’s beach cleanup database. We use this data to pass plastic pollution reduction legislation at the local, state and federal levels in an effort to stop plastic pollution at the source.
Tips for a Cleaner Fifth of July
When the fifth of July is over, the Surfrider Foundation’s work to protect our ocean, waves and beaches doesn’t stop. Join us in our fight against plastic pollution and become a friend of the ocean today.