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Water

Millions of Tons of Plastic Debris Floating in Oceans Is Now Thought to Be Toxic

By Steve Connor, Independent UK. Posted August 20, 2009.


As plastics break down in the sea they release chemicals toxic to humans and animals.
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Scientists have identified a new source of chemical pollution released by the huge amounts of plastic rubbish found floating in the oceans of the world. A study has found that as plastics break down in the sea they release potentially toxic substances not found in nature and which could affect the growth and development of marine organisms.

Until now it was thought that plastic rubbish is relatively stable chemically and, apart from being unsightly, its principle threat to living creatures came from its ability to choke or strangle any animals that either got caught in it or ingested it thinking it was food.

But the latest research suggests that plastic is also a source of dissolved substances that can easily become widely dispersed in the marine environment. Many of these chemicals are believed to toxic to humans and animals, the scientists said.

The scale of plastic pollution in the sea has only been widely recognised in recent years when sailing yachts reported vast areas of ocean, such as an area estimated to be twice the size of Texas in the North Pacific, that seem to be permanently covered in a layer of floating marine litter caught up in swirling ocean currents or gyres.

Some of the items were found to be many decades old, suggesting that the plastic took a long time to degrade. However, a study by Katsuhiko Saido at Nihon University in Chiba, Japan, has found that plastics degrade relatively quickly in the conditions and temperatures that were designed to simulate the environment of the open ocean.

"Plastics in daily use are generally assumed to be quite stable. We found that plastic in the ocean actually decomposes as it is exposed to the rain and sun and other environmental conditions, giving rise to yet another source of global contamination that will continue into the future," Dr Saido said.

"To date, no studies have been conducted on plastic decomposition at low temperature in the environment owing to the mistaken conception that plastic does not decompose. The present study was conducted to clarify that drift plastic does indeed decompose to give rise to hazardous chemicals in the ocean," he said.

The scientists found that when plastics decompose in the ocean they release a range of chemicals, such as bisphenol A and substances known as polystyrene-based (PS) oligomers, which are not found naturally. Bisphenol A has been implicated in disrupting the hormonal system of animals.

A common form of plastic rubbish is styrofoam, which soon gets crushed into small pieces in the sea. However, it also releases substantial quantities of a toxic substances called styrene monomer, which is known to cause cancer, as well as styrene dimers and trimer, which are suspected of being carcinogenic. The trimer also breaks down into the toxic monomer form.

Findings from the study were released yesterday at the American Chemical Society meeting in Washington. Dr Saido said that samples of seawater collected from the Pacific Ocean were found to be contaminated with up to 150 parts per million of some of these components of plastic decomposition.

"This study clearly shows new micro-pollution by compounds generated by plastic decomposition to be taking place out of sight in the ocean. Thus, marine debris plastics in the ocean will certainly give rise to new sources of global contamination that will persist long into the future," he said.

It is estimated that there could be hundreds of millions of tons of plastic rubbish floating in the world's oceans. In Japan alone, it is calculated that 150,000 tons of plastic is washed up on its shores each year.


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But let me guess...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Aug 20, 2009 11:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... if we just keep using our own shopping bags instead of the plastic ones.. we can save the planet! (and before you jump on me for this... I've been doing that for years... its called a messenger bag)

Its not just what we consume... its how much we consume, where it is made, how it gets to us, what it is contained in, as well as what happens to it after we are done with it.

Recycling is a relatively rare thing (still) in most areas, and its a bit too late in the game to think that we can just poke along like we have been taking three decades or so to even begin to get hybrid and electric cars into widespread production and use.

Perhaps the problem is the industrialism itself.
www.greenanarchy.org

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Plastic bag is pollution cotton bag is solution
Posted by: Ecotrendbags on Aug 23, 2009 5:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Earth has been facing immense pollution from our garbage and consumption. The latest deadly pollution is plastic bags that fill up the landfills. With plastic bags becoming a growing concern, cotton canvas bag has become the new way to help stop the pollution.
With plastic bag pollution being a rising concern, many shoppers need to start using reusable cotton canvas bags in order to stop the pollution.
Plastic bag pollution is very deadly and takes hundreds of years to break down. Even if the component is broken done, the deadly chemicals will go into the ground and water system. By reducing the usage of plastic bag, Earth can recuperate. That's why cotton bags should be used world wide to help reduce the pollution.
It is our generation to stop the pollution and start using cotton canvas bags as the solution. With global warming going out of hand from gas exhaustion, we don't need any more problems especially plastic bags that are harmful when broken down naturally. These broken down elements cause sickness and destruction to the air, soil and water system.
Use cotton canvas bags starting today as a way to stop the plastic pollution that is becoming a major threat to the environment. Our lives are threatened ever more from the growing usage of plastic bags. It is time you bring a canvas bag to shopping the next time you go to a supermarket.
Please learn more at http://www.ecotrendbags.com/

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New Trend among retailers - reducing use of plastic bags
Posted by: Ecotrendbags on Aug 23, 2009 5:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One practice welcomed by environmentally conscious consumers is the selling of Cotton Canvas shopping bag , designed to replace the "paper or plastic" alternatives available at most grocery checkout counters. For a reasonable price, customers can purchase the requisite number of canvas totes to package their groceries and then reuse the bags on future trips to the store, doing their bit to save the environment and saving the retailers a few pennies on every transaction in the process. Savvy retailers often order Canvas totes with their store logo and street address on the bags, a way to market their business and engender customer loyalty while positioning themselves as environmentally friendly. Additional products, such as mini tote lunch bags and backpacks, provide another income stream. For real purists, these bags are often available made of organic cotton canvas.

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bedoins
Posted by: wetwe on Aug 25, 2009 1:10 AM   
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DVD to MOV Mac the most widely used DVD to MOV Mac Converter which can rip DVD files and convert to MOV.

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Cotton feels a lot better
Posted by: gsmiley on Aug 26, 2009 6:17 PM   
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but production has destroyed the Aral Sea and contaminated tens of thousands of hectares of irrigated agricultural land all over the world with pesticides and herbicides. How about hemp?
Anyway 150 parts per million of plastic breakdown products in sea water doesn't ring true. That would be 150 litres in an olympic swimming pool. Maybe the number should have been in parts per billion which is still terrible, 150 tonnes in a cubic kilometre, which is a billion cubic metres (tonnes) of water, like a small shipload of the stuff going down in the big lake near you.
So when you hear industry flaks pouring oil on troubled waters -'our wastes are safe to drink, only a few parts per billion when it gets to you' think that many tonnes dumped into Lake Tahoe or smaller.
Which begs the question is our rose-coloured spectacled species even worth preserving or shall we just party on into the night?

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