It's looking like a very large problem... It's definitely in the seafood. Garbage should NEVER have been just dumped into the waters... There's plenty of land for managed landfills that work much better.
I'm not against plastics, but some decisions are just plain stupid.
Many “managed landfills” are not that particularly well-managed and said plastics infiltrate the ground-water, which then make their way into rivers, which then make their way into the sea/ocean.
How do you wash your clothing? That releases thousands of microplastics every wash. These aren't caught by filters in the home, and most aren't caught by filters at the water company.
Plastics break down into smaller microplastics in the sun. On land they collect more sun then when partially or totally submerged in the ocean. Rain then washes these microplastics from landfills into ground water.
Plastic in the ocean is a huge problem, but it's not the only source of microplastics, and it might not even be the largest.
Easier said than done. Most plastic (and other garbage) floating in the ocean comes from developing economies that can't afford or will not build landfills or proper garbage infrastructure.
No need for dichotomy here. Both types of pollution (heat trapping molecules and plastics) are waste from a consumption culture that doesn't think long term about material life cycles. When we make progress as a species, we will realize that all environmental impact is interrelated and needs to be assessed well before we "move fast and break things"
Right, the likely answer is both will kill us, and many of these things seem to be correlated in so many ugly ways.
Let's not forget also that Plastics are "cheap" to consume precisely because they originate as by-products/waste-products of fossil fuel consumption. One consumption problem indirectly produces the other.
In this we will need regulation to prevent the lazy from destroying the environment and possibly poisoning all of us. These microplastics are becoming an increasing problem. It stems from lack of responsibility in the preserving the commons.
Congratulations, you've found something. Now, show us any convincing analysis that it is a problem.
Preferably an RCT or similar analysis with control group. This will be extremely tricky to test, you'd need essentially people isolated from modern world.
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[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 52.1 ms ] threadI'm not against plastics, but some decisions are just plain stupid.
You would have to go WAY out of the way to only wear natural fibers with no synthetic component.
Plastic in the ocean is a huge problem, but it's not the only source of microplastics, and it might not even be the largest.
> “The smallest microplastic particles are capable of entering the bloodstream, the lymphatic system, and may even reach the liver,”
Sometimes I wonder what will kill us first - climate change or toxins.
Let's not forget also that Plastics are "cheap" to consume precisely because they originate as by-products/waste-products of fossil fuel consumption. One consumption problem indirectly produces the other.
https://www.mcsuk.org/downloads/pollution/positionpaper-micr...