Home
Go Green Green Living
Green Products
Green Jobs
Green Christmas
Ecology
Air Clean Air
Air Pollution
Indoor Air Pollution
Indoor Air Quality
Air Purifiers
Air Filters
Cleaning Green Cleaning
Carpet Cleaning
Spring Cleaning
House Cleaning
Wellness Wellness
Can't Sleep
Stress Relief
Depression
Neck Support
Essential Oils
Aromatherapy
Meditation
Anxiety
Aloe Vera
Work From Home
Beauty Beauty Products
Anti Aging
Olive Oil
Argan Oil
Nutrition Organic Food
Cocktails
Vegetable Juices
Cholesterol
Antioxidants
Fish Oil
Honey
Omega 3
Vegan Recipes
Vitamins
Green Tea
Organic Coffee
Healing Alternative Medicine
Herbs
Magnetic Healing
Holistic Medicine
Natural Remedies
Acupuncture
Herbalism
Heart
ADHD
Quit Smoking
Water Safe Water
Water Filters
Water Bottles
Water Distiller
Bottled Waters
Energy Green Home Energy
Hydropower Energy
Solar Panels
Solar Energy Facts
Solar Generator
Tankless Heaters
Geothermal Energy
Wind Generators
Hybrid Cars
Hydrogen Cars
Solar Energy
Nuclear Energy
Recycling Recycling Statistics
Building Materials
E Waste
Glass Recycling
Recycling Facts
Ink And Toner
Waste Management
Recycling Paper
Plastic Bottles
Cell Phones
Gardening Organic Gardening
Herb Gardening
Vegetable Garden
Indoor Plants
Flowers
Alternative Farming
Magnolia
Garden Landscape
Christmas Deco
Site Info Green Resources
About Us
Contact Us
The Green Blog
Privacy Policy
Add An Article
Subscribe To This Site
XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines

Where Does All That Plastic Go-

by Jodi Lee

A legacy that will destroy the planet.

It was touted as the solution to the homemaker’s drudgery. A way to ease the burden of mealtimes, dishes, the convenience of the modern world. Throw away plastic. Disposable plates, cutlery, containers, bags, bottles. Quick and easy. Never have to clean again, just toss it out.

Quick and easy has come at a terribly high price.

By now, I’m sure you know to recycle your plastic milk jugs, yogurt containers, and water bottles. But consumer plastic recycling is still very low, only 4% of plastic sees the inside of a blue bin. Plastics have infiltrated the world but it goes well beyond our fridges. Our oceans, lakes, and rivers are infested.

Why does this matter? Our marine life mistake the colorful floaty bits for food. Fish, turtles and other sea creatures get tangled in the handles of shopping bags, suffocate when stuck inside a container, choke on a plastic ring, poison themselves and die of malnutrition with stomachs filled with bottle tops.

Plastics do not biodegrade. Ever.
Our oceans are dynamic systems, made up of complex networks of currents that circulate water around the world. These systems along with wind and the earth’s rotation create “gyres”, huge, slow rotating whirlpools where plastic garbage can accumulate. In the Central North Pacific Gyre, pieces of plastic outweigh surface zooplankton by a factor of 6 to 1. Marine life rely on plankton as their food source - their diets are now heavily influenced by our use of disposable plastics. The plastics release chemical additives and plasticizers into the water and also adsorbs pollutants like PCBs and pesticides like DDT which end up in the foods we eat. Our addiction to throw away plastics is not only harming the environment but is also poisoning ourselves.

Capt Charles Moore explains this serious environmental issue in this video. http://www.ted.com/talks/capt_charles_moore_on_the_seas_of_plastic.html

How can we reduce our ecological footprint?

Here are five ways to save our waterways.
1. Get a reusable steel water bottle and swear off buying water bottled in plastic bottles.
2. Use cloth shopping bags and refuse the plastic ones.
3. If you must buy something in a plastic container, but the biggest one available. This reduces your frequency of buying another container.
4. If you have a choice, buy the product in glass or metal.
5. Avoid plastic wrap.

We can no longer ignore the destruction that is plastic. Our lives depend on it. For more ways to save the planet and reduce your ecological footprint, take the free assessment at Going Green Today.

Click here to post comments.

Join in and write your own page! It's easy to do. How?
Simply click here to return to Green Living Articles
.




©2009-2012 The Green Living Expert - All Rights Reserved






Quick Green Search