Literature DB >> 31829850

Solving the plastic problem: From cradle to grave, to reincarnation.

Christopher J Rhodes1.   

Abstract

Plastic packaging accounts for 36% of all plastics made, but amounts to 47% of all plastic waste; 90% of all plastic items are used once and then discarded, which corresponds to around 50% of the total mass of plastics manufactured. Evidence for the ubiquity of microplastic pollution is accumulating rapidly, and wherever such material is sought, it seems to be found. Thus, microplastics have been identified in Arctic ice, the air, food and drinking water, soils, rivers, aquifers, remote maintain regions, glaciers, the oceans and ocean sediments, including waters and deep sea sediments around Antarctica, and within the deepest marine trenches of the Earth. They have also been detected in the bodies of animals, including humans, and as being passed along the hierarchy of food chains, up to marine top predators. Evidence has also been presented that microplastics are able to cross different life stages of mosquito that use different habitats - larva (feeding) to pupa (non-feeding) to adult terrestrial (flying) - and therefore can be spread from aquatic systems by flying insects. The so-called 'missing plastic problem' appears to be, in part, due to limitations in sampling methods, that is, many of the very small microplastic particles may simply escape capture in the trawl nets that are typically employed to collect them, but have been evidenced in grab-sampling experiments. Moreover, it is simply not possible to measure entirely through the vast, oceanic volumes of the oceans. It can, however, be concluded with some confidence that the majority of the plastic is not located at the sea surface, and indeed, several different sinks have been proposed for microplastics, including the sea floor and sediments, the ocean column itself, ice sheets, glaciers and soils. The treatment of land with sewage sludge is also thought to make a significant contribution of microplastics to soil. A substantial amount of airborne microparticulate pollution is created by the abrasion of tyres on road surfaces (and other 'non-exhaust' sources), meaning that even electric vehicles are not 'clean' in this regard, despite their elimination of tailpipe PM2.5 and PM10 emissions. The emergence of nanoplastics in the environment poses a new set of potential threats, although any impacts on human health are not yet known, save, as indicated from model studies. While improved design, manufacture, collection, reuse, repurposing and reprocessing/recycling of plastic items are necessary, overwhelmingly, a curbing in the use of plastic materials in the first place is demanded, particularly from single-use packaging. However, plastic pollution is just one element in the overall matrix of a changing climate ('the world's woes') and must be addressed as part of an integrated consideration of how we use all resources, fossil and otherwise, and the need to change our expectations, goals and lifestyles. In this effort, the role of deglobalisation/relocalisation may prove critical: thus, food and other necessities might be produced more on the local than the global scale, with smaller inputs of fossil fuels for transportation and other purposes, water and fertilisers, along with a marked reduction in the need for plastic packaging.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Great Pacific Garbage Patch; Mariana Trench; Plastics; biodegradable plastics; bioplastics; circular economy; compostable plastics; deglobalisation; epipelagic; fertilisers; marine debris; marine litter; marine pollution; mesopelagic; microplastics; nanoplastics; nurdles; ocean column; ocean gyre; packaging; permaculture; plastic manufacture; plastic pollution; plastic recycling; plastic waste; polymer; relocalisation; water

Year:  2019        PMID: 31829850     DOI: 10.1177/0036850419867204

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Prog        ISSN: 0036-8504            Impact factor:   2.774


  6 in total

1.  Biopolymer-Based Films from Sodium Alginate and Citrus Pectin Reinforced with SiO2.

Authors:  Luís Marangoni Júnior; Camila Rodrigues Fozzatti; Ewelina Jamróz; Roniérik Pioli Vieira; Rosa Maria Vercelino Alves
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-29       Impact factor: 3.748

Review 2.  Environmental Impacts of Personal Protective Clothing Used to Combat COVID- 19.

Authors:  Mohammad Abbas Uddin; Shaila Afroj; Tahmid Hasan; Chris Carr; Kostya S Novoselov; Nazmul Karim
Journal:  Adv Sustain Syst       Date:  2021-10-13

3.  Occurrence of microplastics in edible aquatic insect Pantala sp. (Odonata: Libellulidae) from rice fields.

Authors:  Witwisitpong Maneechan; Taeng On Prommi
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2022-02-08       Impact factor: 2.984

4.  Sustainability in Numbers by Data Analytics.

Authors:  Seeram Ramakrishna; Wayne Hu; Rajan Jose
Journal:  Circ Econ Sustain       Date:  2022-08-06

5.  Modification of Poly(lactic acid) with Orange Peel Powder as Biodegradable Composite.

Authors:  Nonni Soraya Sambudi; Wai Yi Lin; Noorfidza Yub Harun; Dhani Mutiari
Journal:  Polymers (Basel)       Date:  2022-10-02       Impact factor: 4.967

Review 6.  Bibliographic mapping of post-consumer plastic waste based on hierarchical circular principles across the system perspective.

Authors:  Dania Sitadewi; Gatot Yudoko; Liane Okdinawati
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2021-06-04
  6 in total

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