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#plasticpackaging

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#PlasticRain Is the New #AcidRain

Plastic rain could prove to be a more insidious problem than acid rain.

by Matt Simon
June 12, 2020

"Hoof it through the national parks of the western United States—Joshua Tree, the #GrandCanyon, Bryce Canyon—and breathe deep the pristine air. These are unspoiled lands, collectively a great American conservation story. Yet an invisible menace is actually blowing through the air and falling via raindrops: #Microplastic particles, tiny chunks (by definition, less than 5 millimeters long) of fragmented plastic bottles and microfibers that fray from clothes, all #pollutants that get caught up in Earth’s atmospheric systems and deposited in the #wilderness.

"Writing in the journal Science, researchers report a startling discovery: After collecting #rainwater and air samples for 14 months, they calculated that over 1,000 metric tons of microplastic particles fall into 11 protected areas in the western US each year. That’s the equivalent of over 120 million plastic water bottles.

"'We just did that for the area of protected areas in the West, which is only 6 percent of the total US area,' says lead author Janice Brahney, an environmental scientist at Utah State University. 'The number was just so large, it's shocking.'

"It further confirms an increasingly hellish scenario: Microplastics are blowing all over the world, landing in supposedly pure habitats, like the #Arctic and the remote #FrenchPyrenees. They’re flowing into the #oceans via #wastewater and tainting #deepsea #ecosystems, and they’re even ejecting out of the water and blowing onto land in sea breezes. And now in the American West, and presumably across the rest of the world given that these are fundamental atmospheric processes, they are falling in the form of plastic rain—the new acid rain.

"Plastic rain could prove to be a more insidious problem than acid rain, which is a consequence of #SulfurDioxide and #NitrogenOxide emissions. By deploying #scrubbers in power plants to control the former, and catalytic converters in cars to control the latter, the US and other countries have over the last several decades cut down on the #acidification problem. But microplastic has already corrupted even the most #RemoteEnvironments, and there’s no way to scrub water or land or air of the particles—the stuff is absolutely everywhere, and it’s not like there’s a plastic magnet we can drag through the oceans. What makes plastic so useful—its hardiness—is what also makes it an alarming pollutant: Plastic never really goes away, instead breaking into ever smaller bits that infiltrate ever smaller corners of the planet. Even worse, plastic waste is expected to skyrocket from 260 million tons a year to 460 million tons by 2030, according to the consultancy McKinsey. More people joining the middle class in #EconomicallyDeveloping countries means more #consumerism and more #PlasticPackaging. "

Read more:
getpocket.com/explore/item/pla

PocketPlastic Rain Is the New Acid RainPlastic rain could prove to be a more insidious problem than acid rain.
Replied in thread

@Urban_Hermit @primonatura I’m 70+—we had no #PlasticPackaging in the 50s and no #AluminumCans until Coors started shipping them all over the West in the 60s. Everything wet came in glass, wax cartons, or #SteelCans. Dry food was in paper, paperboard, or #WaxedPaper. #Glass is the best package for beverages and most canned foods, especially #DepositBottles that go back to local bottlers to be washed and reused. Waxed paper worked well, even for potato chips. #BottleBill

Scientists' Coalition for an Effective Plastics Treaty on health risks in Plastic packaging:

"❗️ Monomers are small #chemicals that are the building blocks of #plastics. Some of them are known to be hazardous to human health, and they are often thought to not be in final plastic products. But this is not always true. A published scientific review by some of our Scientists' Coalition members found that at least 22 types of #monomers can be present in plastic #FoodPackaging and transfer into food."

#PlasticsTreaty #INC3 #PlasticPackaging #Health #Plastics

linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:l

www.linkedin.comScientists' Coalition for an Effective Plastics Treaty on LinkedIn: #chemicals #plastics #monomers #foodpackaging #polymers #circulareconomy❗️ Monomers are small #chemicals that are the building blocks of #plastics. Some of them are known to be hazardous to human health, and they are often thought…