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Showing Original Post only (View all)More Recycling Won't Solve Plastic Pollution [View all]
ecycling plastic is to saving the Earth what hammering a nail is to halting a falling skyscraper. You struggle to find a place to do it and feel pleased when you succeed. But your effort is wholly inadequate and distracts from the real problem of why the building is collapsing in the first place. The real problem is that single-use plasticthe very idea of producing plastic items like grocery bags, which we use for an average of 12 minutes but can persist in the environment for half a millenniumis an incredibly reckless abuse of technology. Encouraging individuals to recycle more will never solve the problem of a massive production of single-use plastic that should have been avoided in the first place.
As an ecologist and evolutionary biologist, I have had a disturbing window into the accumulating literature on the hazards of plastic pollution. Scientists have long recognized that plastics biodegrade slowly, if at all, and pose multiple threats to wildlife through entanglement and consumption. More recent reports highlight dangers posed by absorption of toxic chemicals in the water and by plastic odors that mimic some species natural food.
Plastics also accumulate up the food chain, and studies now show that we are likely ingesting it ourselves in seafood. If we consumers are to blame, how is it possible that we fail to react when a study reports that there will be more plastic than fish in the oceans by 2050? I would argue the simple answer is that it is hard. And the reason why it is hard has an interesting history.
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/more-recycling-wont-solve-plastic-pollution/
Everything I buy seems to be wrapped in plastic -- except produce. And I put a plastic sack around my vegetables in the store.
Is so much plastic really necessary?
Sometimes I can just barely extract the product I just bought from its plastic shroud.
Do we really need so much plastic? Wouldn't life be better without a lot of it?
What can we do about this?