More Than 14m Tonnes of Plastic Believed To Be at the Bottom of the Ocean (theguardian.com) 76
At least 14m tonnes of plastic pieces less than 5mm wide are likely sitting at the bottom of the world's oceans, according to an estimate based on new research. From a report: Analysis of ocean sediments from as deep as 3km suggests there could be more than 30 times as much plastic at the bottom of the world's ocean than there is floating at the surface. Australia's government science agency, CSIRO, gathered and analysed cores of the ocean floor taken at six remote sites about 300km off the country's southern coast in the Great Australian Bight. Researchers looked at 51 samples and found that after excluding the weight of the water, each gram of sediment contained an average of 1.26 microplastic pieces. Microplastics are 5mm or less in diameter and are mostly the result of larger plastic items breaking apart into ever smaller pieces. Stemming the tide of plastic entering the world's waterways and ocean has emerged as a major international challenge. Dr Denise Hardesty, a principal research scientist at CSIRO and a co-author of the research published in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science, told the Guardian that finding microplastic in such a remote location and at such depths "points to the ubiquity of plastics, no matter where you are in the world."
so... should we stop making it? (Score:3)
I'd think we could at least make laws preventing the use of disposable plastic. ( aka paper straws, wax paper instead of plastic wrap, glass bottles).
However, not even those efforts would come without cost.
How many people ( millions or would it be billions ) will starve to death if we stop making plastics?
What kind of bad effects is it having? What is the cost of doing little or nothing?
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How many people ( millions or would it be billions ) will starve to death if we stop making plastics?
Unknown. The only option seems to be reducing dependency on plastics over time, a task which is meeting even more resistance now that oil companies are realizing that the era of gasoline is coming to a close.
What kind of bad effects is it having? What is the cost of doing little or nothing?
Unknown, but environmental changes like this are historically negative and the problem created will remain for decades.
Re: so... should we stop making it? (Score:2)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
If you eat seafood, you probably eat microplastics. Drink from a water bottle, you've probably ingested microplastics. Breathe? Yep, microplastics.
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You say they're 'inert', but they're not. Plastics outgas; plastics decompose; chemicals present in your body may cause decomposition of the micro- and nano-particles in your body, and the decomposition products may give you cancer or some other serious illness.
You still think of it now as 'iner
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When it comes to our bodies, the way it molecularly interacts with molecules to survive, those pieces of plastic are enormous and pass through out digestive system. Other critters digestive systems are different, especially the marine ones and the plastic does not clear their digestive tract but remains blocked within. They basically starve with a full stomach.
A lot of the plastic on the ocean floor did not just sink to the ocean floor, it was eaten by marine critters who died and sank to the ocean floor.
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Re: so... should we stop making it? (Score:2)
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'What kind of bad effects is it having?'
"Nothing plastic is inert."
Put a plastic bag over your head for 15 minutes if you want to see a bad effect.
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Plastic is not inert, in as much as the link below uses the word "maybe", endocrine disruptors ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] take BPA as an example in tin cans) would like to raise their (ugly) hand.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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so... should we stop making it?
An extreme first measure, I think a better thing to do would be to prohibit the shipping of garbage/recyclables overseas. This particular "solution" has resulted in people making a quick buck by simply dumping the whole load directly into the ocean.
I'd think we could at least make laws preventing the use of disposable plastic. ( aka paper straws, wax paper instead of plastic wrap, glass bottles).
Instead of prohibiting disposable plastic items, you could simply mandate that they biodegrade within a reasonable amount of time. Bioplastic is a very real thing.
The only reason these have not been implemented is because doing so costs more money, not lots, ju
mitigation of long-term efffects (Score:2)
Aside, my inner engineer says "14m tonnes" equals 14 kg [nist.gov].
Re:so... should we stop making it? (Score:5, Interesting)
I read some articles stating that the majority of all ocean plastic came from a small handful of rivers that were being dumped in, and had almost nothing to do with things like people throwing plastic straws into the sea for unknown reasons. Then someone told me the articles were misreporting because the study was solely talking about plastics coming from rivers, not all possible sources. But that in turn raises the question how much plastic that goes in your trash can somehow gets dumped into the sea. At this point I have no idea which way the truth is being bent.
https://www.scientificamerican... [scientificamerican.com]
https://factcheck.afp.com/wide... [afp.com]
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The vast majority of the plastic in the oceans comes from rivers because it needs the outflow of water to push the plastic out to sea. If you dump plastic elsewhere along the beach, the wave action tends to just push it back onto land. Which you've probably seen with flotsam and jetsam washed up near the high-tide mark at the beach.
So plastic dumped in riv
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The truth isn't bent, someone missed a critical word when misreporting scientific studies and the media ran with it. There are still general realities that are very much true:
a) A lot of plastic gets dumped in rivers in the 3rd world.
b) A lot of plastic from those rivers are due to overuse of single use plastic in that 3rd world.
c) A lot of plastic in those rivers is due to the west exporting our problems to the 3rd world.
It's easy to criticise the 3rd world right until you get to point 3. But it's not like
Half right, half nonsense (Score:1)
Yes, the plastic mainly comes from 3rd world. Western countries have had successful anti-litter campaigns decades ago and there is very, very little litter these days.
So my state Queensland banning plastic utensils is a feel-good measure that is likely to have zero impact.
The waste does NOT come from "the west exporting our problems". The third world countries willingly use their disposable plastic, often made domestically.
Recycling plastic does not end up in the rivers -- or it should not. It makes perf
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people in the west are shouting "damn Asians" as they throw their Styrofoam boxes and plastic straws straight out of the car window.
Seriously? Who does that? (where do you live?) We have not even used styrofoam junk-food containers for decades here.
In China in the 1990s, I remember food in trains sold in those styrofoam clam-shells, and *everybody* thew the boxes and bones out of the window.
The rural train-lines would have been visible from high altitude as a double-white-line, as they were just left to accumulate.
Nowadays, even China has sealed windows and rubbish bins on the trains. Not sure about cars.
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Seriously? Who does that? (where do you live?) We have not even used styrofoam junk-food containers for decades here.
I see it rarely enough, but there's still enough of it around. Point was people (as in the human race) are feral polluting arsehats. Mostly it's food wrappers and plastic bags, though recently the most littered products are disposable masks.
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Point was people (as in the human race) are feral polluting arsehats.
An odd perspective. You are bothered because of a social contract that says we should not dump our rubbish. This is unique to humans.
No other species has such social contracts, except on a very small scale.
When the cyanobacteria filled the atmosphere with their waste, and killed most life, nobody cared. Only we care.
We are capable of building societies that protect the commons. No other species has the means to temper individual or tribal selfishness.
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Meanwhile a lot of people in the west are shouting "damn Asians" as they throw their Styrofoam boxes and plastic straws straight out of the car window.
Where do you get a styrofoam box these days? I'll bet that doesn't happen.
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Where do you get a styrofoam box these days? I'll bet that doesn't happen.
Many takeaway shops still offer them. I don't know why. I hate the damn things. But they aren't the most littered object. Right now that is masks, followed by plastic bags, followed by food wrappers.
Paper Straws SUCK & not in a good way (Score:1)
Paper straws do not last long enough in many drinks to finish the drink.
Paper straws do not work well nor last long enough for thicker drinks.
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That's true, you'll need 2 to 3 paper straws to get through an American Large drink (40 oz. or 1.2L).
Why can't they make straws out of the same waxed paper as the cups?
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>Why can't they make straws out of the same waxed paper as the cups?
That's not wax - it's a layer of plastic. Paper cups aren't recyclable for that very reason.
What you're asking is essentially to go back to plastic straws.
Source: My last job was at a paper cup manufacturer.
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I used to use them when I was a kid. I never had any problems with them. I think they had a wax associated with the paper. I ran across them when I was cleaning out my parents place in the 1980s. That and some 1960s Strawberry Quick and 1960s Valium LOL. I remember when they switched to plastic straws. Add that to not recycling glass bottles... and so many other things we used to do.
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How many people ( millions or would it be billions ) will starve to death if we stop making plastics?
None?
Re: so... should we stop making it? (Score:3)
"How many people ( millions or would it be billions ) will starve to death if we stop making plastics?"
If millions of people are eating plastic, they're going to starve to death anyway. Someone should tell them it has no nutritional value.
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The "we" in industrialised countries are not (directly) dumping plastic in the ocean.
But what we can do, is stop exporting shiploads of our garbage to third world countries for "processing".
This is already happening as China, India and other countries have banned the import of garbage.
We need to do our own recycling, or at least disposal, such as burning the plastic for electrical power.
The majority of the plastic waste in oceans is from domestic sources in third world countries, so this is just a start.
Let lizard lips have it (Score:2)
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Re: Let lizard lips have it (Score:1)
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Like the K-T boundary that shows the debris left over from the asteroid collision that killed the dinosaurs, the plasticene sedimentary layers will be a marker for the human extinction.
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multiply by approximately 1.1 for U.S. tons (a.k.a. add 10%).
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Roughly six of yo momma.
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Can someone convert that into a real weight?
1000 kg, or 2205 lbs.
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Re: Tonnes? (Score:1)
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Can someone convert that into a real weight?
0.00892857142 Libraries of Congress. I think. I got 112 Tonnes for the weight of 1LoC from here [reddit.com]
So that's 125,000 LoC's of plastic. (L's-oC of plastic? I'm getting lost in the units...Libraries of Congress, not Library of Congresses)
Please correct me if I'm wrong.
How about checking where from? (Score:5, Informative)
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China stopped accepting the west's "recycling". Vietnam's PM is on a war against plastic, banning straws and looking at all single use plastic next. But while the "culprits" may be select countries, the "enablers" are certainly the west. We in the west could do wonders to convince the likes of Nestle and Coca Cola to stop actually using plastic bottles too, and then leading by example is a thing.
Simply blaming will get you nothing other than criticism as you look like a rich nation once again shitting on th
Re: How about checking where from? (Score:3)
As such trying to pass off blame like you lefties love to do will go nowhere.
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Researchers looked at 51 samples and found that after excluding the weight of the water, each gram of sediment contained an average of 1.26 microplastic pieces. Microplastics are 5mm or less in diameter and are mostly the result of larger plastic items breaking apart into ever smaller pieces.
Lucky those 5mm pieces still had the place of manufacture QR codes on them WindBourne.
14 meters tonnes (Score:2)
How much is a "meter tonne"?
Unless they mean megatonne.
How much is that in metric?
14 teragrams?
1.4e13 grams?
Hows come no one speaks metric anymore.
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I'm sure they mean meter-tonne. It's a unit of torque, backwards as most Americans record torque; they recorded the slow down of the earth's rotation, and calculated the requisite torque.
Yes, I'm almost certain this is correct.
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I can't figure out who is more incompetent; the Guardian, or mssmash for blindly copy/pasting it.
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Lower-case 'm' prefix means 'milli'. "14m tonnes" is a wayof making 14kg sound bigger. Just like those "2000 mAh" batteries are the same as 2Ah.
If they mean 14 million tons, that is an average of 40kg per square km of ocean, or 40 milli-grams per square metre.
So if spread evenly, it would be a layer of 40 nano-metres thick.
For comparison, the oceans are estimated to contain 4 billion tons of uranium. So 14Mt is not much.
At last, some good news about plastic waste (Score:5, Insightful)
The bottom of the ocean, at abyssal depths, is the best place for it to end up, ready to become coal again.
When we get around to seeding the oceans with nutrients to promote the growth of carbon-eating algae, we want to find a species that forms a surface mat before it runs out of nutrient and then dies off and sinks. If we scatter our algae food in gyres where floating plastic collects, the alga mat could take a lot of the plastic to the bottom with it. If we really do this right, it could also take out a lot of the fish which have been eating microplastics.
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Coal is not formed at abyssal depths.
Now back to the show!
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So let's just do nothing, then.
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and exactly *HOW* are we going to eliminate plastic? you do realize like 99% of everything is made from plastic right?
.. or imposing a tax to make it uneconomical to use.
oh right, lets empower the rich again
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What the hell are 14 meter tonnes? (Score:2)
Seriously, what does that even mean?
(German here.)
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But since no one can imagine that mass in their mind, we need it in hogsheads, football stadiums, Olympic swimming pools, or something we can visualize.
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It means both msmash and the Guardian are totally science illiterate.
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or they made a typo? It's not a big deal. They aren't writing Mars Climate Orbiter code.
Plastic everywhere (Score:2)
That's just humanity, marking it's territory.
Only ... (Score:2)
That does not sound like enough by a long margin!
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14 meter tonnes is even less.
I was worried for a second there (Score:1)
Climate Crisis effecting in Karachi Pakistan (Score:1)
Just mine it (Score:2)
Build some submersible robots to mine the stuff and recycle it.
3 things to do (Score:2)
Reduce population slowly.
Paper.
Glass.
That is all! Enough plastic junk, OK? Plastic clothes are terrible, perhaps the worst use of plastic.
95% Oceans floor (Score:2)