People and wildlife in coastal communities of British Columbia will soon benefit from a cleaner coast because of new funding from the Province.
“British Columbians and communities along our spectacular coastline want and deserve to enjoy an environment free of marine debris and plastic pollution,” said George Heyman, Minister of Environment and Climate Change Strategy. “We now know the harms that plastic waste causes to marine life and also how it finds its way into human-food sources as it breaks down. We are proud to support these innovative projects to reduce and collect plastic waste and create a cleaner, healthier shoreline for communities and wildlife to enjoy today and in the future.”
As part of the Clean Coast, Clean Waters (CCCW) initiative, the Province is investing $8 million for 17 more projects in 2024 in collaboration with small businesses, non-profit organizations and First Nations to tackle marine debris and plastic pollution along B.C.’s coastlines, while supporting economic development and jobs for people.
“What people often miss when marvelling at the beauty of British Columbia is the devastating impacts humans have caused to the marine ecosystem,” said Kyle Watters, assistant field supervisor at Let's Talk Trash, one of this year’s recipients of CCCW funding. “The CCCW funding is integral to empowering coastal communities to make waves in terms of cleanup efforts. It allows us to contribute directly to maintaining the health of this beloved ecosystem, which is an essential life-support system of the planet and has inherent value in climate resiliency.”
Since 2020, the Clean Coast, Clean Waters initiative has removed 215 derelict vessels and cleaned up more than 2,100 tonnes of marine debris from more than 6,400 kilometres of shoreline, while creating or maintaining nearly 2,400 well-paying jobs. This year’s projects are expected to clean an additional 1,900 kilometres of shoreline, remove at least 31 derelict vessels and clean at least six derelict aquaculture sites, creating 639 new jobs. Seven of the 17 projects are being led by First Nations.
“səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh Nation) is grateful for Clean Coast, Clean Waters funding to support cleanup along the Tsleil-Waututh Nation reserve shoreline,” said Chief Jen Thomas, səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh Nation). “This funding will allow us to remove a pile of asphalt and concrete that was brought into our community years ago. As active stewards of the land and waters, this shoreline cleanup is important to Tsleil-Waututh people, and we expect the project to have positive impacts for water quality as well as overall ecological health and biodiversity.”
The funding is part of a $25-million provincial investment announced in May 2023, which brings the Clean Coast, Clean Waters funding to $49.83 million.
The CCCW initiative is part of the CleanBC Plastics Action Plan to reduce pollution from plastic waste. The initiative is also closely tied to the Province’s new Coastal Marine Strategy, developed in collaboration with First Nations.
Quick Facts:
- The fund is intended for marine coastal First Nations, local governments and B.C. non-profits and organizations with experience in marine cleanup.
- Three types of projects are supported under the fund: marine-shoreline cleanup, derelict-vessel removal and derelict aquaculture-site cleanup.
- This is the first year that CCCW has been able to provide funding to projects under the newly established funding stream for derelict aquaculture-site cleanup.
Learn More:
For more information about the Clean Coast, Clean Waters Initiative Fund, visit: https://bccleancoast.ca
For information about B.C.’s Coastal Marine Strategy, visit: https://engage.gov.bc.ca/coastalmarinestrategy/
For a backgrounder about the funding recipients, visit: https://news.gov.bc.ca/files/CCCW_2024_FundingRecipients.pdf
A backgrounder follows.