Plastics are forever

Plastics are everywhere around us – in our homes, our vehicles, our computers, as packaging – replacing more traditional materials such as wood, metal, glass, leather, paper and rubber because they are lighter, stronger, more durable and corrosion resistant, and often cheaper.

But that durability means that most plastics do not biodegrade, so almost all the plastic ever produced is still here somewhere on the planet in one form or another, and will remain here for centuries to come, possibly up to 1000 years – nobody knows for certain yet.

plasticTotal global production of plastics was just 5 million tonnes per year in 1950, but had risen to 245 million tonnes by 2006. In the UK we now use about 5 million tonnes a year, over one third of this for packaging. Only a small proportion is reclaimed or recycled, and an extraordinary amount of plastic waste now occupies landfill space worldwide.

In addition it’s estimated that 5% of all the plastic produced since the 1950’s is now in the world’s oceans, comprising 90% of all floating marine litter – the United Nations Environment Program estimated in 2006 that on average every square mile of ocean contains 46,000 pieces of floating plastic.

About 20% of this comes directly from shipping, mostly from containers lost overboard. Some is intentionally fly-tipped. The rest comes from the land, swept by tides, wind, rain and floods into streams and rivers and out to sea. 70% eventually sinks to the ocean floor. The rest floats, much of it ending up in oceanic gyres as massive islands of waste such as ‘the Great Pacific Garbage Patch’. It may eventually be deposited as litter on a beach, or could float around for decades before breaking down into smaller particles and becoming absorbed into the food chain or sinking and becoming part of the ocean floor sediment.

Quite rightly, much attention has been focused on the dangers of plastic litter to seabirds, whales, dolphins, turtles, seals and other marine life. It’s thought to cause the deaths of over a million seabirds and more than 100,000 marine mammals each year, but researchers are now warning that the risk of hidden contamination could be even more serious.

beach-rubbish-21Unlike biological materials, plastic doesn’t decompose. Instead, it photodegrades when exposed to sunlight, fragmenting into smaller and smaller pieces without chemically breaking down. In large areas of ocean tiny plastic bits, often called ‘mermaid tears’, have been found to outweigh the plankton by a factor of six to one or more.

But, no matter how small they become, these plastic bits never become digestible by any living creature.  In addition they contain additives such as pigments and plasticizers, known to be endocrine disruptors, plus toxic metals such as cadmium and lead. Recent research by the University of Plymouth has shown that the particles also attract toxic chemicals from the surrounding seawater and concentrate them on the surface of the plastic, acting as ‘magnets’ for poisons in the oceans.

These small poisonous particles, found throughout the oceans and mixed with the sand on beaches, are now threatening the entire food chain. The toxins they contain are known to be a threat to human health. In the water the particles are mixed in with and resemble the plankton, and are being eaten by filter feeders, which are then consumed by large creatures. The process of bio-accumulation has the potential to further increase the concentrations of toxins as they pass along the food chain and into our human diets.

More information:

plastic rubbish

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Posted under cause for concern, educational resources, plastic, waste

Bottled water

Break the bottled water habit

Over a billion people in the world have no access to reliably clean drinking water. Dirty water kills 1.8 million people a year, 90% of them children.

On average each person in the developed world uses between 100-175 gallons of water in the home each day, compared to the 5 gallons per day used by an average family in the developing world. Increasing demand means that rivers and underground reserves are running dry, so that by 2025 it is estimated that 3 billion people will be facing chronic water shortages.

In the UK we have high quality clean water supplied on demand at the turn of a tap. We even flush our toilets and water our gardens with water fit to drink, yet we spend about one and a half billion pounds a year on bottled water.

It takes 7 litres of water to make Plastics are forevera single 1-litre plastic bottle.

Worldwide 27 million tonnes of plastic are used every year to bottle water. Only 10 per cent of plastic water bottles are recycled.

Most of these plastics never biodegrade but instead go through a process called photodegradation where they are broken down by sunlight into smaller and smaller pieces, each of which are still plastic polymers.

This process can take over 400 years for a bottle.

bottled water Although there are times when it makes sense to buy bottled water, for the most part you could do yourself and the world a favour and save some money by drinking water from the tap. One quarter of all bottled water is just filtered tap water – when Decanter Magazine conducted a blind tasting test of 24 brands of bottled water Thames tap water came joint third.

If you really can’t face drinking water straight from the tap you could try investing in an simple filter jug which will remove the chlorine from your household supply and improve the taste. Reusablebottle.co.uk stock water filters as well as a wide range of re-usable bottles.

For an original green gift have a look at the Do-It-Yourself Bottled Water Kit containing ten self-adhesive stickers to re-brand empty water bottles for re-use. The labels are produced by Tap who are campaigning to persuade consumers to switch from bottled water to tap water. They are donating 70% of their profits to fund water development projects in the developing world.

If you really must buy bottled water, try Belu which is natural mineral water sourced and bottled in Shropshire and supplied in glass bottles or in bio-bottles which are made from corn and are compostable. Belu is non-profit making and all proceeds go towards funding water projects in drought-afflicted areas. You can buy Belu in the UK at larger branches of Tesco, Waitrose and at Fresh & Wild stores.plastic bottles

The Tap Challenge – Tap are asking you to trust your tastebuds in a line-up against four leading brands of bottled water to see if you can pick out the Eau de Tap. And if you can’t tell the difference then perhaps it really is time to get off the bottle!

For more information see

The bottled water industry is the triumph of marketing over common sense, it has become a symbol of our disposable culture at its dumbest.” Joshua Blackburn, founder of Tap.

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Posted under educational resources, plastic, reduce reuse recycle, waste