Submitted by Sariel007 t3_10724g8 in UpliftingNews
AftyOfTheUK t1_j3mc0or wrote
Reply to comment by DedicatedDdos in Single-use plastic cutlery and plates to be banned in England by Sariel007
>Some googling gives me data from 2019 at around ~50kg per person per year for countries like the USA (53kg), Australia (59kg), UK (44kg). From here.
>
>That's estimated single use plastics, not other trash.
That's quantifying how much plastic is used. I asked for quantification of the damage/harm caused.
>To add to this, we know reducing plastic use is good
That's my entire point. We don't.
DedicatedDdos t1_j3mff2m wrote
>That's my entire point. We don't.
Yes, we do.
knock yourself out I'd say, plenty of research on this subject.
I'll provide you with a single excerpt, again you're free to dive deeper into this.
>Plastic contains chemical additives, most of which remain unknown or understudied. Meanwhile, many of the chemicals additives for which scientific information is available are known to be toxic. A growing body of evidence points to the health risks posed by plastic additives. These include endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), which are linked to infertility, obesity, diabetes, prostate or breast cancer, among others. Other health conditions linked to additives include reproductive, growth, and cognitive impairment and neurodevelopment disorders.
there's plenty of research that needs to be done still in this field if we want an accurate picture, but what we know already is pretty damning.
And that is only the health aspect of it. Like I said in my previous comment, most plastics aren't recyclable, so that's 50 kilo per person per year that gets tossed somewhere, anywhere, you're free to do the math on how much avoidable waste that is globally.
On that note, show me a fish, and I'll show you plastic.
AftyOfTheUK t1_j3mimyl wrote
>there's plenty of research that needs to be done still in this field
Doesn't appear to be any kind of quantification of damage, however. The size of the problem appears to be unknown, but we can conclude it's relatively small, otherwise it would be easier to detect and quantify.
>On that note, show me a fish, and I'll show you plastic.
Plastic that didn't make it to a landfill or incinerator, sure. But when properly disposed of, that's not an issue.
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