Yufang Jia and Yiran He
December 5, 2025
This video is part of: Centre for Nature and Climate
Beaches in Australia are now almost 40% cleaner than they were just a decade ago. Scientists did a study of beaches around 6 cities from Hobart in Tasmania to the Sunshine Coast in Queensland. In total, they found a 39% drop in plastic waste and a 16% rise in places with no plastic waste at all.
Beaches across Australia are significantly cleaner than they were a decade ago, thanks to a sustained national effort to reduce plastic pollution. A study of coastal areas around six cities — from Hobart in Tasmania to Queensland's Sunshine Coast — found a 39% drop in plastic waste. Even more promising, the number of locations with no plastic at all rose by 16%.
Australia is aiming to cut plastic waste by 80% by 2030. To reach this goal, the country has introduced more public bins, launched anti-littering campaigns, and created hotlines to report illegal dumping. Container-deposit schemes reward people for returning plastic containers, and several states have already banned or are phasing out single-use plastics.
Clean Up Australia Day, held on the first Sunday of March, mobilizes communities for hands-on cleanup activities. Australia’s efforts align with the Global Plastic Action Partnership, a platform involving 25 national partners and 1.5 billion people. This initiative works to turn international commitments on plastic waste into real, measurable progress.
Yufang Jia and Yiran He
December 5, 2025