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With Plastic Straw Bans Gathering Steam, Are Balloons Next?
With Plastic Straw Bans Gathering Steam, Are Balloons Next?
Dec 27, 2024 2:46 PM

At a Glance

In the wake of widespread plastic straw bans, many believe balloons could be next to be phased out.When they fall back to earth, pieces of balloons can kill marine life when consumed.

Plastic straws are on their way out, and balloons could be next.

A thorn in the side of environmentalists, the tradition of releasing balloons into the air can be deadly to seabirds and turtles when pieces fall back to earth and are eaten by the creatures. And even though they're a very small fraction of environmental pollution, there are early signs that balloons could be the next item to face scrutiny.

One school is getting ahead of the debate: Clemson University, whichreleases 10,000 balloons into the air just before the start of home football games, announced they'll phase out the tradition this season.

Additionally, a campaign is underway in Virginia that urges newlyweds to partake intraditions that don't involve releasing balloons during ceremonies. And in Rhode Island, the sale of balloons has been banned altogether because of the damage they can cause to marine life.

“There are all kinds of alternatives to balloons, a lot of ways to express yourself,” says Kenneth Lacoste, first warden of New Shoreham, Rhode Island, who cites posters, piñatas and decorated paper.

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Following efforts to limit plastic bags, the push by environmentalists against straws has gained traction in recent months, partly because they’re seen as unnecessary for most. Companies including Starbucks and Disney are promising to phase out plastic straws, which can be difficult to recycle because of their size and often end up as trash in the ocean. A handful of U.S. cities recently passed or are considering bans. And the push may bring attention to other items people may not have considered — like festive balloons.

In this Sept. 7, 2013, file photo, Clemson players run down the hill before the start of a college football game against South Carolina State at Memorial Stadium in Clemson, South Carolina.

(AP Photo/Richard Shiro, File)

“The issue of straws has really broadened the marine debris issue,” says Emma Tonge of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. People might not realize balloons are a danger, she says, because of their “light and whimsical” image.

Balloons are not among the top 10 kinds of debris found in coastal cleanups, but Tongue says they’re common and especially hazardous to marine animals, which can also get entangled in balloon strings.

Chelsea Rochman, an assistant professor of ecology at the University of Toronto, says people should think systemically about waste and pollution, but that efforts to bring attention to specific products shouldn’t be dismissed as too minor.

“If we said that about everything, we wouldn’t get anything done,” she says.

Already, a few states restrict balloon releases to some extent, according to the Balloon Council, which represents the industry and advocates for the responsible handling of its products to “uphold the integrity of the professional balloon community.” That means never releasing them into the air, and ensuring the strings have a weight tied to them so the balloons don’t accidentally float away.

Lorna O’Hara, executive director of the Balloon Council, doesn’t dispute that marine creatures might mistake balloons for jellyfish and eat them. But she says that doesn’t mean balloons are necessarily causing their deaths.

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Clean Virginia Waterways still thinks balloons can be harmful. Included in its report last year: A photo of a soaring bird with a deflated balloon trailing behind it.

The report addresses the “rising concern” of balloons, which also often use helium, a non-renewable resource. It notes the difficulty of changing a social norm and that even typing “congrats” in a Facebook post results in an animation of balloons. It even claims the media play a role and that some groups conduct balloon releases “just so reporters will cover the event.”

“We don’t want to say don’t use them at all. We’re saying just don’t release them,” says Laura McKay of the Virginia Coastal Zone Management Program.

Some states such as California ban balloon releases for other reasons. Pacific Gas & Electric, which serves northern and central California, says metallic balloons caused 203 power outages in the first five months of this year, up 22 percent from a year ago.

Lacoste thinks other towns, particularly those along the coasts, will also ban balloons as people become more aware of environmental issues. He notes that plastic bags were once seen as harmless, but many places now ban them.

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