https://friendsoftheearth.uk/plastics
What is plastic pollution?
Plastic pollution is any plastic that ends up in the environment – from bottles and bags to less obvious sources like teabags and clothes.
In the past 100 years humans have produced (and used) a lot of plastic. It’s cheap, strong, light and versatile, but all of it eventually ends up in the ground, in the air , and in the sea – which is where marine animals like albatross, dolphins and turtles ingest it.
Our plastic waste has invaded the highest mountains and deepest oceans. No one knows exactly how long it will take to disappear, but it’s at least hundreds of years.
How does plastic harm the environment?
Plastic sticks around in the environment for ages, threatening wildlife and spreading toxins. Plastic also contributes to global warming.
Almost all plastics are made from chemicals that come from the production of planet-warming fuels (gas, oil and even coal).
Our reliance on plastic therefore prolongs our demand for these dirty fuels.
Burning plastics in incinerators also releases climate-wrecking gases and toxic air pollution.
Plastic in the food chain
Scientists have detected tiny plastics (smaller than 5mm) in salt, beer , seafood and human stools.
These microplastics break off bigger plastic items, or come from products like car tyres and cosmetics. They even wash off synthetic clothes.
Once they enter our rivers, soils and oceans, they can get into the food chain. As of yet, the impacts on our health are unknown.
How to stop plastic pollution
- Support a new law to phase out non-essential plastics.
- Buy less stuff (go for second-hand where possible).
- Use reusable bags for your groceries.
- Get a reusable bottle and coffee cup.
- Make a packed lunch instead of buying sandwiches.
- Wash your clothes at low temperatures.
What happens to recycled plastic?
Plastic is usually recycled into a lower-grade product. For example, a plastic bottle is likely to be made into polyester, which may then end up in a fleece jumper. Sounds good, but that fleece will shed tiny plastic fibres that will get into the environment and spread pollutants. So recycling plastic just delays the inevitable escape of pollutants into our soils, air, seas and waterways.
That’s why we’re campaigning for a new law to phase out all but the most-essential plastics.
How much plastic is in the ocean?
The total amount of plastic entering the marine environment is over 12m tonnes a year – according to a report by Eunomia in 2016. For comparison, a double-decker bus weighs about 12 tonnes.
Sea creatures can get tangled in plastic or mistake it for food, and the effects are often fatal. Harmful chemicals linked to plastic have been found in species from plankton to dolphins.
Plastic pollution facts
- Only 9% of all plastic waste has ever been recycled .
- 1 million plastic bottles are bought worldwide every minute .
- Nearly 700 marine species have been found entangled in plastic.
- Over 2m tonnes of plastic packaging are used in the UK each year.
- The amount of plastic the UK throws away is set to increase by over 1m tonnes by 2030 .