The Guardian

The women taking the plastic out of periods

Sanitary products litter Europe’s beaches, and 200,000 tonnes a year end up in UK landfill. Meet the people fighting for ‘environmenstrual’ alternatives
Ella Daish is a campaigner seeking to persuade companies and government to remove plastic from women’s sanitary products. Photograph: Ella Daish

Ella Daish has lost count of how many tampon pictures she has. People send them in from all over the world – plastic applicators polluting the environment, blue, orange, green, purple and yellow.

“That’s a rainbow of plastic pollution,” says Daish, 27, a campaigner seeking to persuade companies and governments to remove plastics from women’s sanitary products. “This is a global issue, but period products aren’t talked about much; they need to be stopped at source.”

Sanitary products are the fifth most common item found on Europe’s beaches, more widespread than single-use coffee cups, cutlery or straws. Some is believed to end up in UK landfill every year. The water engineer Hazem Gouda has estimated that .

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