His Beach Cleanup Story Inspired 20 Youth To Remove 5 Tonnes of Plastic From Odisha’s Shore

0
2

Most people walk past a problem and hope someone else will solve it.

Bapi Gochhayat chose differently.

When The Better India shared the story of the young man who spends his mornings cleaning Odisha’s Paradip Beach before heading to work, it wasn’t just a story about plastic waste. It was about what happens when one person’s commitment inspires others to believe that change is possible.

Advertisment

And the response that followed proved exactly that.

The morning ritual that changed a shoreline 

Every morning at 6 am, before heading to work, 29-year-old Bapi Gochhayat cycles to Paradip Beach in Odisha carrying a simple mission — to leave the shoreline cleaner than he found it.

Advertisment

His journey began in 2022 after he noticed plastic waste washing into the sea during a morning walk. Disturbed by the sight, Bapi decided to take responsibility himself. 

With a bag in hand and determination that doesn’t fade, he turns plastic waste into purpose along Odisha’s shoreline. Photograph: (Instagram/@bapi_gochhayat)
Advertisment

For two hours every day, he collected discarded bottles, wrappers, and other litter before returning home and then reporting to his job at Paradip College.

A college dropout with limited resources but unwavering determination, Bapi never waited for support or attention. His efforts have helped remove more than five tonnes of plastic waste from the beach. 

Over time, he also began speaking to visitors about responsible waste disposal and environmental awareness, earning recognition as a Prakruti Bandhu for his contribution to nature conservation.

When The Better India first shared Bapi’s story, his daily act of care reached people far beyond Paradip. What followed was a heartwarming ripple effect.

Read the original story that sparked this change here

A story that brought new hands to the shore 

After the story was shared on The Better India’s English social media platforms, it reached thousands of people across the country.

But the most meaningful outcome was the action that followed.

For years, Bapi had carried out this work largely on his own. After learning about his efforts, people began reaching out not just with words of appreciation, but with a willingness to participate.

Today, more than 20 young volunteers have joined him at Paradip Beach, turning a one-man mission into a collective effort for cleaner coastlines.

Beach cleanup
A single act of responsibility grew into a movement—today, volunteers walk the same stretch of sand that Bapi once cleaned alone. Photograph: (Instagram/@bapi_gochhayat)

Together, they have collected and sent over six tonnes of plastic waste for recycling, preventing it from entering the ocean and helping reduce the environmental burden on the region. What was once a daily routine carried out by a single individual has now become a shared responsibility embraced by many.

Encouraged by this growing support, Bapi has also launched a volunteer campaign to bring even more people into the movement. 

With every new participant, the message becomes stronger: protecting the environment is not the responsibility of a few, but something everyone can contribute to in their own way.

Watch how Bapi’s solo beach cleanup grew into a volunteer-led movement here.

The power of showing up 

Bapi’s journey shows that meaningful solutions don’t always emerge from large institutions or well-funded initiatives. Sometimes, they begin with a single person refusing to ignore a problem.

Beach clean up
What began as one man’s two-hour daily cleanup has already removed over five tonnes of waste from Paradip Beach. Photograph: (Instagram/@bapi_gochhayat)

And when that story reaches the right people, individual action can grow into collective change — creating an impact far greater than anyone imagined at the start.

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: thebetterindia.com