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03/26/2009 09:13 AM     print story email story         Page: 1  | 2  

Editorial: The Great Pacific Garbage Patch

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Most people have heard about sea turtles and large fish mistakenly eating grocery bags that look like jelly fish. Untold numbers of large aquatic animals die in this manner; however, it's the plankton-sized pieces, passed upwards through the food chain, that threaten human health as well.

Organic toxins aside, medical researchers don't yet know what the effects of eating plastic are, but we all know it can't be good. Much attention has been focused lately on the health risks associated with bisphenol A (BPA)--an ingredient used in the production of polycarbonate, which is an unrecyclable type of hard plastic. Epoxy coatings used inside some food cans and water pipes also contain BPA. Several million tons of BPA are produced each year, and in 2008 the federal government issued a warning about its potential health effects.

Some studies have shown that even low doses of BPA can affect maturation, hormone levels, fertility, immune function and brain structure in mice. In 2007, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found "widespread exposure to BPA in the U.S. population." CDC scientists detected BPA in the urine of nearly 93% of the people tested with the highest levels in children and teens.

If the plastic is spread around the world's oceans as widely as reported, cleanup is impossible. However, this summer an expedition will test methods for capturing some of the Plastic Vortex. Project Kaisei hopes to skim the plastic from the North Pacific waters and convert it to diesel fuel that can power continued cleanup. The expedition will be filmed for National Geographic and the group is currently trying to raise funding on their website www.projectkaisei.org.

Ultimately the reduction of plastics is the only plausible solution. Consider these statistics: Every year over 60 billion tons of plastic are produced, much of it for one-time use, and less than 5 percent of the world's plastics are recycled.

National Geographic estimates that more than 85 million plastic bottles are used every three minutes. Much of the plastic waste that is not incinerated (which is toxic in its own right) or land-filled makes its way downstream to the oceans. The UN Environment Programme estimated in 2006 that every square kilometer of sea holds nearly 18,000 pieces of floating plastic and that there are more than 100 million tons of plastic in the world's oceans.

To learn more, check out the documentary "Garbage Island" at www.vsb.tv 

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Bart King is News Editor of SustainableBusiness.com. This column is available for syndication.
Contact bart@sustainablebusiness.com.

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Reader Comments (2)

Author:
John G.

Date Posted:
03/26/09 05:29 PM

It's really not suprising at all. Years ago I was sailing in the Mediterraean with just blue sea all around me - you couldn't see any land on any horizon. However, every few minutes I would see a Clorox bottle, a plastic bag, a diaper - it was quite off-putting. Many of these small islands in the Mediterranean have small villages where the garbage dump is literally a cliff falling down into the sea. If you looked down, you'd see old refridgerators, mattresses and refuse. They have no septic systems - it all drains unprocessed into the harbor. I really noticed it near Athens, Greece. Thirty miles outside of Athens the water is so clear you could can see 10 feet down crystal clear. As you sail towards Athens, at 20 miles away the water starts to turn opaque. At 10 miles away from Athens the water is now murky. When you pull into marina in Athens proper the water is so bad you'd be very, very afraid to swim it it. And the stench is unbearable. especially after a rain where the runoff enters the ocean.

Author:
Henny

Date Posted:
02/10/12 10:53 PM

Hahaha. About water botelts … I only buy a few and then continue to reuse them by filling them with filtered tap water.

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