Yes. Drinking straws are a relatively minor source of oceanic plastic pollution.

That is in perspective: Plastic drinking straws are a big problem in itself. But in comparison that problem is still a much smaller problem than commonly perceived or claimed to be. Other sources of plastics for ocean pollution are bigger in numbers, weight, direct or indirect impact on ocean life.

Probably most of us have seen the horrendously emotional "turtle suffers from straw in the nose" video from 2015. Seeing this will have an impact on the watcher that is pretty much disconnected from any reasonable thought and certainly not very conducive to think in statistical terms about this problem.

In contrast to entanglement, all items except paper bags were deemed to pose at least a small threat via the risk of ingestion. The items known to be ingested by seabirds, sea turtles and whales are all found among the top 20 items collected during Ocean Conservancy's annual International Coastal Cleanup.

In this study, food packaging, straws and stirrers and plastic utensils in particular were scored high by respondents. These are also some of the most common items found on beaches and waterways, but not all have been well documented in the scientific literature as posing threats to marine-wildlife to date.

When looking purely at numbers, experts in the field are focused mainly on other sources of danger to marine life and environment.



While the scientific study of marine debris and its ecological impacts is relatively new, insights are growing rapidly as marine ecologists focus on this topic. Scientific knowledge is most robust around impacts from entanglement, likely because this impact is easiest to observe in nature, especially between derelict fishing gear and large animals. Comparatively less is known about ingestion and there is currently a poorer understanding of chemical contamination effects on wildlife.

Entanglement of marine animals in marine debris, especially derelict nets and other abandoned fishing gear is widely recognised as a major source of mortality. The findings reported here substantiate this idea, with pots, lines, traps, nets, and buoys ranking as the highest threat to marine taxa, including sea turtles and marine mammals. Given that fishing gear is intentionally designed to ensnare and capture fish, it is expected that lost or intentionally discarded gear would continue to ensnare both fish and other marine taxa, with considerable risk of death by exhaustion or suffocation. When compared to other consumer items discarded in the ocean, fishing gear clearly poses the greatest ecological threat. Plastic bags and balloons, however, were also found to pose considerable entanglement risk to marine taxa. While balloons are generally small compared to plastic bags, they are often associated with a length of twine that likely poses the greatest entanglement threat. Plastic bags generally have handles which pose an entanglement risk as well as a 3-dimensional structure that creates a space in which an animal or parts of an animal can become entwined; indeed, plastic bags have been shown to entangle pinnipeds. The expert elicitation findings reported here confirm that compared to most other consumer plastic items, plastic bags pose one of the greatest impacts to ocean wildlife and thus, from an environmental impact perspective, plastic bags warrant the specific attention they have received from governments and advocates to address their use. Item ID Item name Rank of expected impact Mean Bird Turtle Mammal 6 Buoys/traps/pots 1 1 1 1 7 Monofilament 2.3 3 2 2 8 Fishing nets 2.7 2 3 3 14 Plastic bags 5.7 4 9 4 17 Plastic utensils 5.7 7 4 6 1 Balloons 6.7 8 5 7 4 Butts 7.3 5 12 5 2 Caps 7.7 9 6 8 9 Food packaging 8.7 10 7 9 12 Other EPS Packaging 9.7 11 8 10 11 Hard plastic cont. 11.3 6 13 15 16 Plastic Food Lids 11.3 13 10 11 18 Straws/Stirrers 12.3 14 11 12 19 Takeout containers 15.3 15 18 13 3 Cans 15.7 17 14 16 15 Beverage bottles 16 12 17 19 20 Unidentified Plastic Fragment 16.3 16 19 14 5 Cups&plates 16.7 18 15 17 10 Glass bottles 17.7 19 16 18 13 Paper bags 20 20 20 20 Chris Wilcox et al.: "Using expert elicitation to estimate the impacts of plastic pollution on marine wildlife", Marine Policy 65 (2016) 107–114.

All the above is just ranking the more or less direct threat items might pose, if they get into ocean. Longer term effects are not covered but they are likely to grow if the plastics are ranked for "time to breakdown" (relatively low for straws) and "level of contamination" like complex metal binding, flame-retardants etc (relatively low for all food-grade plastics).

The if was already mentioned. Not all plastic ever produced really ends up in the ocean. Now, dumping plastic into the ocean or letting it get there inadvertently is not a good idea. But that is a problem many have recognised and taken action against it:

Plastics in the marine environment are widely recognized as a global issue.

Current international strategies and policies to reduce single-use plastics (plastic bags and microbeads) are reviewed.

Many nations have adopted policies (since 1991) to reduce single-use plastic bags.

A rising tide of policy strategies to reduce microbeads began in 2014, but are yet to be implemented.

Dirk Xanthos & Tony R.Walker: "International policies to reduce plastic marine pollution from single-use plastics (plastic bags and microbeads): A review", Marine Pollution Bulletin Volume 118, Issues 1–2, 15 May 2017, Pages 17-26.

How does this relate to in numbers?

Australian scientists Denise Hardesty and Chris Wilcox estimate, using trash collected on U.S. coastlines during cleanups over five years, that there are nearly 7.5 million plastic straws lying around America's shorelines. They figure that means 437 million to 8.3 billion plastic straws are on the entire world's coastlines.

But a ban may be a bit of a straw man in the discussions about plastics pollution. Straws make up about 4 percent of the plastic trash by piece, but far less by weight. Straws on average weigh so little—about one sixty-seventh of an ounce or .42 grams—that all those billions of straws add up to only about 2,000 tons of the nearly 9 million tons of plastic waste that yearly hits the waters. Steve Russell, vice president of plastics for the American Chemistry Council, said people can reduce waste by not taking straws, but "in many cases these plastics provide sanitary conditions for food, beverages and personal care." The key to solving marine litter, Russell says, is "in investing in systems to capture land-based waste and investing in infrastructure to convert used plastics into valuable products."

Seth Borenstein: "Science Says: Amount of straws, plastic pollution is huge", Phys.org, April 2018.

And despite America being in the top list of ocean polluters regularly:

there are some much sorer problem spots to tackle than banning plastic straws there for huge gains (in this case: reductions) for the environment.

Cultural Conundrum at Heart of Thailand’s Plastic Trash Dilemma, NewsDeeply, 2017

Melissa Breyer: "These 10 rivers likely the source of millions of tons of ocean plastic", TreeHugger, 2017:

Previous research concluded that 1.15 to 2.41 million metric tons of plastic waste entered the ocean by way of rivers for a global total of 67 percent coming from 20 polluting rivers. By using a larger data set and separating particles by size, the new study found that rivers contribute even more: Between 410,000 and 4 million metric tons of ocean plastic a year, with 88 to 95 percent coming from only 10 polluting rivers. The ten rivers are:

In East Asia:

–– Yangtze

–– Yellow

–– Hai He

–– Pearl

–– Amur

–– Mekong

In South Asia:

–– Indus

–– Ganges Delta

In Africa:

–– Niger

–– Nile

And while this may all seem like rather dismal news, the (relative) bright side is tangible. Given that so much of the pollution is coming from just a few sources, managing that waste could have a big impact. The authors conclude: “Reducing plastic loads by 50% in the 10 top-ranked rivers would reduce the total river-based load to the sea by 45%.” Which would prove challenging in and of itself, but at least knowing where to aim some effort is a good start.

To be clear: Not a single plastic drinking straw should end up in the ocean or on its shores. But arguing with straws likely contorts the issues.