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Dagupan, Philliphines. Photo from OrbMedia. |
Nowadays we can easily see plastics with anyone anywhere. Check your today’s snack: are they wrapped in a plastic packaging? Or maybe the ice coffee you had this afternoon, do they use plastic cups and plastic straws? How about your groceries – does the staff offer you plastic bags to carry them?
Most likely, the answer to these questions will be a ‘yes’.
Over the past 50 years, world plastic production has increased 20x from 15 million tonnes in 1964 to 311 million tonnes in 2014, and about 50% of the plastic produced are disposed of after a single-use.
What do this numbers mean to you?
The world is evolving to provide a more convenient way for people to consume. Yes. But there is a consequent to the convenience that you’ve got from plastics: the plastic waste.
Though using plastic in our daily life, we probably not fully aware that it might cause harm to us. The clothes from synthetic polyester that you wear – it is pretty much using the same material as the plastic bottle that you use to drink. Thus, these synthetic fibers release a small fraction of microplastic every time they are washed. Guess where those micro plastic headed? The river and the ocean, sure do! Let’s also take a look at our daily waste of plastics – plastic bag, for example. If the plastic bag that we throw to the garbage bin somehow leak to the body of water (river/ocean), the sun might break it down into smaller particles that will be very difficult – if not impossible – to degrade in the environment. It will stay as microplastics, adding more and more microplastics in the environment – which one day its fraction might be too small to be filtered and is possible to end up entering the water that we consume everyday!
Consuming plastic in your water doesn’t sound good, isn’t it?
Now, are you interesting enough to read on? Let’s see what this #BeatPlasticPollution is all about.
HOW MUCH ARE PLASTIC WASTE IN THE ENVIRONMENT? IS IT A BIG DEAL?
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Global production, use, and fate of plastics (1950 to 2015; in million metric tons). Source: Geyer et al. (2017) |
The discarded plastic in the land are usually treated by landfilling – according to Ellen MacArthur’s research, 40% of plastic packaging discarded are piling up in the landfill, creating a huge pyramid of waste. Other than that, it is also worth to note that annually, 8 million tonnes of plastics leak into the ocean – which is equivalent to dumping the contents of one garbage truck into the ocean per minute. To understand better how much we’ve been dumping the plastics, let’s meet The Garbage Patch or also called ‘Plastic Gyres‘.
Gyres are the centers of convergence of multiple currents in the ocean. There are five major oceanic gyres in the world located in North and South Pacific, North and South Atlantic, and the Indian Ocean. These gyres form when ocean currents create circular water movement, allowing things to congregate in the middle. This is when plastics, and other junks in the ocean, enter and create Garbage Patch/Plastic Gyres.
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Map of Garbage Patch/Plastic Gyres from Blue Growth |
Although many different types of trash enter the ocean, plastics is the majority of marine debris found in the water. Most likely, it is because of the amount of plastic we used and disposed of and because of the fact that plastics do not biodegrade – it breaks down into smaller pieces instead. The Garbage Patch itself made up of tiny bits of plastic called microplastics – which derived either from the breakdown of macroplastics through UV (i.e. from break down of plastic bags) or from the microplastics material we used in everyday life (i.e. toothpaste). In the Garbage Patch, total-mass-wise, 92% of the debris is macro and mega plastics, while object-count-wise, 94% of total debris are microplastics. Here is a quote from those who got the chance to see the garbage patch/plastic gyres first hand:
“Yet as I gazed from the deck at the surface of what I ought to have been a pristine ocean, I was confronted, as far as the eye could see, with the sight of plastic. It seemed unbelievable, but I never found a clear spot. In the week it took to cross the subtropical high, no matter what time of the day I looked, plastic debris was floating everywhere: bottles, bottle caps, wrappers, fragments.”
–Capt. Charles Moore, discoverer of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch
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Vacha Dam, Bulgaria, 2009. Photo courtesy of Dimitar Dilkoff. Taken from Sott |
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Nusa Lembongan, Bali, Indonesia, 2018. Photo courtesy of Nick Phumprey. Taken from The Coral Triangle |
OKAY, THAT’S A BAD NEWS. HOW MAY IT AFFECT US?
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Plastic fibres in tap water all over the world. Graphic by The Guardian. Data from OrbMedia. |
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Graphic by Statista. Taken from Forbes. Data source from OrbMedia |
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For compilation of micro plastic in our daily life, check here |
“We know plastics are building up in marine animals and this means we too are being exposed, some of us every day. Between the microplastics in water, the toxic chemicals in plastics and the end-of-life exposure to marine animals, it’s a triple whammy.“
– Jacqueline Savitz of campaign group Oceana
So plastic is now not only polluting the environment – but also entering the food and drink that we consume.
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Graphic from OrbMedia. Data from UN FAO |
Though the research shows there is a possibility for microplastic to be absorbed into our body – particularly when it is break down into smaller particles called nano plastics – the health effects remain unknown. “Plastic is suspected to interact with the immune system, to cause oxidative stress and changes to the DNA” – as quoted from UN FAO. But, the same source mentioned that it is safe to state that microplastics does not seem to have a food safety threat. That said, there are many knowledge gaps regarding plastics in human bodies that should be studied further, such as toxicological data of commonly ingested plastic or the distribution and absorption of nano plastic particles within the tissues and organs of the human body. Therefore, we might not need to fully worry for now – but we should remain alert that, those plastics we use in everyday life, is not just giving us convenience – it potentially give us harm as well.
NOTED! NOW, WHAT CAN I DO TO LESSEN THE IMPACT OF PLASTICS?
Plastics are everywhere – but that doesn’t mean we cannot choose to not using it. As cheesy as it may sounds, but start small by changing your behavior matters. There are many guides of how to live a life with less plastics, one of them can be checked in Less Plastic website. Check one of the less plastic guides for your daily life below!
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Graph from lessplastic.co.uk |
On a personal note, even though we are moving towards #BeatPlasticPollution, this does not necessarily mean that we should ban plastic 100% from our life. True, there are some people who make it living without plastics. But there are some others that see plastic as an urgent need, for example, those with disabilities. Thus, knowing how polluting it is and how it may harm us, let’s just be more selective: choose other materials whenever it is possible, but when you choose to use plastic, please use it wisely.
Happy World Environmental Day!
Let’s #BeatPlasticPollution 🙂


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