
They shot her dog in her own yard to make her stop. It didn’t work.
Her name is Diane Wilson. A fourth-generation shrimper from Seadrift, Texas. High-school diploma. Mother of five. The billion-dollar plastics giant she took on is Formosa Plastics. She beat them. And she’s still fighting today.
Start in 1989. The bay is dying. Dead dolphins wash ashore. Dead pelicans float in. The shrimp vanish. Then a fellow shrimper hands Diane a newspaper clip. Calhoun County, Texas her county ranks number one in the entire nation for toxic pollution.
So she calls a meeting. Just to ask questions about the chemical plants. That one meeting turns the whole town against her.
Overnight she’s the enemy. Neighbors call her a traitor. Thugs threaten her. Someone shoots her dog. Then someone tries to sink her boat with her still on it.
Her target is Formosa Plastics. A global petrochemical giant. Its plant at Point Comfort sits right on her beloved Lavaca Bay. And it’s pumping the water full of nurdles tiny plastic pellets, the size of fish eggs. Fish eat them. Birds eat them. Then they starve.
Diane fights for decades. Hunger strikes. Demonstrations. She climbs chemical towers. She’s arrested more than 50 times. She never backs down.
Then she has an idea. Get the proof. So she walks the shoreline. For three years. Over a 20-mile stretch with a handful of former Formosa workers. They gather roughly 30 million plastic pellets. They take 7,000 photos. Bag after bag after bag of evidence collected by hand.
In 2017 she sues under the Clean Water Act, the law that lets ordinary citizens sue polluters. She loads her evidence into a horse trailer. And hauls it to federal court.
In 2019 the judge rules. He calls Formosa a “serial offender.” He says its pollution was “extensive, historical, and repetitive.” A Texas shrimper has just beaten a global giant with bags of plastic and the truth.
Then comes the number. $50 million. The largest settlement in the history of any citizen Clean Water Act case in the United States. Formosa is ordered to clean up the bay and stop discharging plastic entirely.
If the name Erin Brockovich means anything to you the file clerk with no law degree who took down a California utility over poisoned water, the role that won Julia Roberts an Oscar then you’ve already met Diane Wilson. She is that exact story. Except this one happened on the Texas coast. And she did it by hand.
Now here’s the part nobody expects. Diane kept none of it. Not one dollar. She gave the entire $50 million away to a trust for the bay, the town, erosion projects, a park, and summer camp for local kids.
And the nurdles? They’re not just a Texas problem. They wash up on beaches on every continent on Earth. They’re one of the largest sources of ocean plastic on the planet. Fish swallow them and then they end up on your plate. This is happening in the water near you, too.
Formosa couldn’t even stop after the ruling. They kept dumping. So Diane kept catching them and collected millions more in penalties. “They can’t seem to stop the plastic,” she said.
In 2023 the world finally caught up. Diane won the Goldman Environmental Prize. People call it the Green Nobel. A shrimper from a tiny fishing town. Honored across the globe.
She is in her 70s now. Still in Seadrift. Still on the water. And as you read this, she is on another hunger strike camped in a tent outside a Dow chemical plant, 24 hours a day, taking on the next giant poisoning her bay.
They shot her dog. They tried to sink her boat. They could not make her stop. They still can’t.
Tag the person you know who refuses to back down.








