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Human impact has created a 'plastic planet'

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prasad1

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Earth's surface is being noticeably altered by the production of long-lasting man-made materials, resulting in us entering an 'age of plastic', according to a new study.

Our planet's oceans and lands will be buried by increasing layers of plastic waste by the mid-century due to human activity, researchers said.

The study led by the University of Leicester researchers examined the evidence that we now live in the Anthropocene, an epoch where humans dominate the Earth's surface geology.

"Plastics were more or less unknown to our grandparents, when they were children. But now, they are indispensible to our lives," said Jan Zalasiewicz, Professor at Leicester's Department of Geology.

"Plastics are also pretty well everywhere on Earth, from mountain tops to the deep ocean floor - and can be fossilised into the far future. We now make almost a billion tonnes of the stuff every three years," said Zalasiewicz.

"If all the plastic made in the last few decades was clingfilm, there would be enough to put a layer around the whole Earth. With current trends of production, there will be the equivalent of several more such layers by mid-century," he said.
The study suggests that plastics have such a long-lasting impact on the planet's geology because they are inert and hard to degrade.

As a result, when plastics litter the landscape they become a part of the soil, often ending up in the sea and being consumed by and killing plankton, fish and seabirds.

Plastics can travel thousands of miles, caught up in the 'great oceanic garbage patches', or eventually being washed up on distant beaches. Plastics can eventually sink to the sea floor, to become a part of the strata of the future.

The rise of plastics since the mid-20th century, both as a material element of modern life and as a growing environmental pollutant, has been widely described.

Their distribution in both the terrestrial and marine realms suggests that they are a key geological indicator of the Anthropocene, as a distinctive stratal component, researchers said.

"Plastics will continue to be input into the sedimentary cycle over coming millennia as temporary stores - landfill sites - are eroded.

"Plastics already enable fine time resolution within Anthropocene deposits via the development of their different types and via the artifacts, known as 'technofossils', they are moulded into, and many of these may have long-term preservation potential when buried in strata," said Zalasiewicz.

"Once buried, being so hard-wearing, plastics have a good chance to be fossilised - and leave a signal of the ultimate convenience material for many million years into the future. The age of plastic may really last for ages," he added.
The study was published in the journal Anthropocene.
http://www.deccanherald.com/content/525632/human-impact-has-created-plastic.html
 
One more worry is the gel type sanitary napkins and baby / adult diapers!

With the amount of such trash thrown away every day, I wonder how the world would be after two or three decades!! :sad:
 
During the recent rains and floods in Chennai (Dec 2015) I visited several places soon after the water receded. The buildings, trees close to the rivers Adyar, Buckingham canal and cooum were "adorned" with plastic bags, sheets among other garbage. Most of the drains were choked with plastic waste. The Govt should impose total banning of plastic bags & commercial packaging using plastic.
 
Extremely dangerous. We inherited a most livable planet. What we have done has made it difficult to live. Is this we want our children to take over? time to think.
 
I think plastics require an outright ban..But can we determine what will be its alternate...Paper? Jute?
Jute or cloth bags will be better options because paper making kills trees! :(

Also, jute and cloth bags can be easily washed and reused. :)
 
Govt can ban the plastic manufacturing units.

Alternating option is that Govt. can very well levy 200% to 300% excise duty on manufacturing units of plastic goods as a measure of disincentive for the plastic production so that manufacture and usage would be minimized.
 
Plastic is found in virtually everything these days. Your food and hygiene products are packaged in it. Your car, phone and computer are made from it. And you might even chew on it daily in the form of gum. While most plastics are touted as recyclable, the reality is that they're “downcycled.” A plastic milk carton can never be recycled into another carton — it can be made into a lower-quality item like plastic lumber, which can’t be recycled.
How big is our plastic problem? Of the 30 million tons of plastic waste generated in the U.S. in 2009, only 7 percent was recovered for recycling. This plastic waste ends up in landfills, beaches, rivers and oceans and contributes to such devastating problems as the Great Pacific Ocean Garbage Patch, a swirling vortex of garbage the size of a continent where plastic outnumbers plankton. Plus, most plastic is made from oil.
Luckily, there are simple steps you can take that will dramatically decrease the amount of plastic waste you generate.
http://blogs.ei.columbia.edu/2012/01/31/what-happens-to-all-that-plastic/

Gum was originally made from tree sap called chicle, a natural rubber, but when scientists created synthetic rubber, polyethylene and polyvinyl acetate began to replace the natural rubber in most gum. Not only are you chewing on plastic, but you may also be chewing on toxic plastic — polyvinyl acetate is manufactured using vinyl acetate, a chemical shown to cause tumors in lab rats. While it is possible to recycle your gum, it may be best to skip it — and its plastic packaging — altogether.


There are three ways of utilizing non-recycled plastic for energy production: converting plastics directly into liquid fuel, using separated plastics as fuel in special types of power plants, and increasing the amount of garbage burned (currently only 10 percent) in waste-to-energy facilities.

Plastics can be converted into crude oil or other types of liquid fuel through pyrolysis, a high heat process. Agilyx, an Oregon-based company, produces processing systems that convert ground unsorted plastic of all types into synthetic crude oil (which can be refined into ultra-low sulfur diesel, gasoline, or jet fuel), as well as synthetic lubricants and greases, some of which can be made back into plastic. The units are designed to go where the plastic is: municipal waste facilities, waste management companies, and recyclers. The base system can convert 10 tons of plastic into 60 barrels of oil each day for about $60 a barrel.
 
But what would we use to place rubbish in?

Plastic garbage bags do not leak.
Dear Renu,

The jute bag will work ONLY for dry rubbish. I remember one incident while thinking of wet rubbish. My sister in law,

who lives in the U S of A, had a lot of left over sAmbar sAdham after a function, even after distributing to all her friends

and freezing three day's stock for her family! She took a huge vessel of s.s and patiently ground it into a paste by feeding

it into the kitchen sink! So that amount of food reached the sewer line without crossing the alimentary canal of humans!! :lol:
 
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