PLASTICS IN THE OCEAN:
Defining the Problem
Did you know that our oceans are filled with plastics? Sometimes, plastic can be found floating on the surface or in the stomachs of marine animals and birds. It even washes up on the shore and litters our beaches. And, do you know where those plastics come from? HUMANS!
Plastic was first introduced in the 1950's. And, if you really think about it, that's not that long ago! Sadly, in just 67 years, look how much damage we have done to the earth... |
In our research, we found:
Plastics are a danger and are harmful to life:
- People throw 4 million pieces of trash, at nearly 400,000 pounds, into the ocean each day.
- 8 million tons of plastic is dumped into our oceans every year.
- By 2012, the world's oceans contained 165 million tons of plastic pollution
- There are enough nurdles (tiny, plastic beads) in our oceans to cover the entire U.S.
- 80% of plastic waste come from land.
- Plastic falls off barges, ships, and gas platforms off shore.
- China, Indonesia, Vietnam,Thailand and the Philippines are the top producers of plastics.
- The United States is one of the Top 5 Waste Generating Developed countries in the world.
Plastics are a danger and are harmful to life:
Source: https://marinedebrisblog.files.wordpress.com/2016/06/orr_plastic_in_the_ocean_infographic_final.jpg
22 Preposterous Facts About Plastic Pollution:
- In the Los Angeles area alone, 10 metric tons of plastic fragments—like grocery bags, straws and soda bottles—are carried into the Pacific Ocean every day.
- Over the last ten years we have produced more plastic than during the whole of the last century.
- 50 percent of the plastic we use, we use just once and throw away.
- Enough plastic is thrown away each year to circle the earth four times.
- We currently recover only five percent of the plastics we produce.
- The average American throws away approximately 185 pounds of plastic per year.
- Plastic accounts for around 10 percent of the total waste we generate.
- The production of plastic uses around eight percent of the world's oil production (bioplastics are not a good solution as they require food source crops).
- Americans throw away 35 billion plastic water bottles every year (source: Brita)
- Plastic in the ocean breaks down into such small segments that pieces of plastic from a one liter bottle could end up on every mile of beach throughout the world.
- Annually approximately 500 billion plastic bags are used worldwide. More than one million bags are used every minute.
- 46 percent of plastics float (EPA 2006) and it can drift for years before eventually concentrating in the ocean gyres.
- It takes 500-1,000 years for plastic to degrade.
- Billions of pounds of plastic can be found in swirling convergences in the oceans making up about 40 percent of the world's ocean surfaces. 80 percent of pollution enters the ocean from the land.
- The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is located in the North Pacific Gyre off the coast of California and is the largest ocean garbage site in the world. This floating mass of plastic is twice the size of Texas, with plastic pieces outnumbering sea life six to one.
- Plastic constitutes approximately 90 percent of all trash floating on the ocean's surface, with 46,000 pieces of plastic per square mile.
- One million sea birds and 100,000 marine mammals are killed annually from plastic in our oceans.
- 44 percent of all seabird species, 22 percent of cetaceans, all sea turtle species and a growing list of fish species have been documented with plastic in or around their bodies.
- In samples collected in Lake Erie, 85 percent of the plastic particles were smaller than two-tenths of an inch, and much of that was microscopic. Researchers found 1,500 and 1.7 million of these particles per square mile.
- Virtually every piece of plastic that was ever made still exists in some shape or form (with the exception of the small amount that has been incinerated).
- Plastic chemicals can be absorbed by the body--93 percent of Americans age six or older test positive for BPA (a plastic chemical).
- Some of these compounds found in plastic have been found to alter hormones or have other potential human health effects.
source: EcoWatch.com