Here on the Isle of Man we too have the same problem of plastic waste on the beaches.
A local Guy set up a team of volunteers who go mob handed to a particular beach at a time and fill black bags with plastic waste and other items washed ashore with every tide, I believe at present he has about 4,000 volunteers on the island who turn up when they can even if only once a year and they take tons literally tons to the incinerator or local recycle centers who in turn send it for incineration.
Ideally rather than burn it we would be better recycling all these plastics..............
http://www.hahnplastics.com/hanit-slabs/ . here is one recycler there are many others throughout the world one guy in south america is building houses from recycled plastic blocks even the roof panals are recycled waste plastic.
As an angler I was on different committees with the IOM government going back to the 70s when we were telling them they needed to create artificial reefs and start looking after our local seas...........mostly in vain as it cost money. same old excuses.
Now it is Karma time..........we have hardly any fish left in the Irish sea all round us has been decimated and the food chain destroyed compared to how it used to be.
Suddenly people are waking up to the reality of what they have done or allowed to be done to our seas and I only hope it is not too late.
These microbeads in makeup facial scrubs and may other products etc are the worst offender to date as the fish and the food chain digest these and many die before even reaching maturity to reproduce..........SO THE CHAIN IS BROKEN
We all need to wake up to the situation and do something about it before it is too late.
We need new regulations on the use of damaging contents we use and also a determined effort to stop the dumping at sea of all waste'
Soapbox put away again for now
Manxie xx