The sparkly glitter we enjoy using for makeup and craft projects is actually made from microplastic, one of the world's biggest environmental pollutants and potential killers of marine life. Those tiny plastic sparkles find their way down the drain and into the ocean where they contribute to the 51 trillion fragments of microparticles found floating there. It has been documented that there is plastic present in every third fish caught in the U.K. Soon there will be more plastic than fish in the sea. But there are easy ways to make small changes and one is to use products like the biodegradable glitter made by the Danish company Ecosparkles- here. Their glitter is a biodegradable alternative made of cellulose film and will prevent further damage to the environment. And it is compostable!
But glitter is just the tip of the iceberg. Our convenience-driven, throwaway, fast food culture indulges in plastic bottles, straws, plastic bags, lids and containers. These items are thrown away and survive forever in landfills or are washed into storm drains and out to sea. It's time for the plastic and oil industries to take some responsibility but instead they continue their deep-pocketed campaigns to quash anti-plastic legislation and discourage scientific research.
Yet there are men and women devoting their lives to studying the ecological impacts of plastic pollution and trying to find solutions. You can't delve far into that world before finding mention of Marcus Eriksen and his 5 Gyres Institute. He studies the global distribution and ecological impact of marine plastic waste by making sailing expeditions to destinations that include all 5 subtropical gyres, plus the Bay of Bengal and many inland lakes and rivers. He recently published the first global estimate of all plastic of all sizes floating in the world's oceans, which totals 270,000 metric tons.
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Now you can make your mousepad from plastic free compostable glitter |
But glitter is just the tip of the iceberg. Our convenience-driven, throwaway, fast food culture indulges in plastic bottles, straws, plastic bags, lids and containers. These items are thrown away and survive forever in landfills or are washed into storm drains and out to sea. It's time for the plastic and oil industries to take some responsibility but instead they continue their deep-pocketed campaigns to quash anti-plastic legislation and discourage scientific research.
Yet there are men and women devoting their lives to studying the ecological impacts of plastic pollution and trying to find solutions. You can't delve far into that world before finding mention of Marcus Eriksen and his 5 Gyres Institute. He studies the global distribution and ecological impact of marine plastic waste by making sailing expeditions to destinations that include all 5 subtropical gyres, plus the Bay of Bengal and many inland lakes and rivers. He recently published the first global estimate of all plastic of all sizes floating in the world's oceans, which totals 270,000 metric tons.